Jim Harrison was cool as fuck, and I need to read more of his books. In this collection of food columns and essays, he somehow ties the act of cooking at eating to every facet of human existence, with particular focus on art, sex, politics, and our very existence within the natural order.
Thoughts and notes, in no particular order:
- Throughout his columns, Harrison casually mentions epic dinners with Jack Nicholson and Orson Welles, coke-fueled fishing trips with Jimmy Buffet, and random meals spent with other big-name celebrities and chefs. I figured he was bullshitting, but after doing a bit of research I discovered that he was in fact homies with all these people. As a screenwriter, he was mildly successful, but I guess even mid-tier screenwriters could make crazy connections back in the day. Of course, it probably helped that he was cool as fuck, as I said.
- Harrison was the closest thing we had to a modern pagan. By that, I mean that he essentially (if not explicitly) worshiped nature as a higher power, and he saw it as the closest thing humankind had to a manifestation of God. This lends his insights into food, cooking, and hunting a particular level of spiritual weight that other food writers don't have. He was not a vegetarian — not even close — but he nonetheless had an incredible amount of respect for animals, and he believed that the gap between us and the animals we eat should be closed, made more intimate. Alienation is, after all, at the root of all cruelty. Factory farming and slaughter depends upon our alienation from animals, and those things were logically an anathema to Harrison.
- This psuedo-paganism lent him generally agreeable political opinions (developed class consciousness, stinging criticism of capitalism, profit optimization, and corporate farming/food, incredible disdain for Nixon and Reagan, etc). The Bill Clinton cheerleading is a bit embarrassing at times, but meh, no one is perfect.
- Google Jim Harrison and look at a few photos of him. If he got laid even half the amount of times that he says he did, then no one has any excuse. It does help that he has a great sense of humor.
- I really love, admire, and aspire to be Harrison's particular brand of gourmand. He appreciated all types of fine meals, particularly those made from wild game and locally sourced ingredients. Of course, he had high standards, and he hated fast food (to my chagrin), but he had an incredibly open mind, and he was never pretentious nor snooty about his tastes. Respect.