In a development that has shaken the literary establishment to its very foundations, a Booker Prize-winning novel about food has triggered a debate so fierce that it might actually distract the chattering classes from their own navel-gazing for a full five minutes. The book, titled "The Last Supper of the Indigent Gourmand" (or something equally pretentious), has been hailed by critics as "innovative storytelling" and a "masterpiece of culinary prose." But let's be honest, the only thing more innovative than writing a novel about food is finding a quiet corner in a London literary salon where someone isn't loudly declaring that they could have written a better one themselves.
Yes, the critics are at it again. They have descended upon this book like seagulls on a discarded chip, pecking at its pages with feverish delight. "The descriptions of slow-braised lamb shank brought me to tears," gushed one reviewer in The Guardian, a newspaper that once described a cheese toastie as "transgressive." Another critic, writing for The Times, claimed that the novel's exploration of the emotional resonance of a perfectly baked soufflé was "epochal." I have only one question for these people: have you ever tasted actual food, or do you subsist solely on metaphor?
Let us not forget the Booker Prize itself, that great British institution that has given us such timeless classics as "Midnight's Children" and "The Remains of the Day." Now it has given us a book that is primarily concerned with whether the protagonist's hollandaise sauce will split. This is not a criticism of the novel per se, but rather a lament for the state of a literary world so disconnected from reality that it considers a recipe for bouillabaisse to be a profound meditation on the human condition.
The debate itself is a masterpiece of circular logic. On one side, we have the traditionalists who argue that a novel about food is inherently frivolous, as if the only proper subjects for literature are war, death, and the existential angst of middle-aged men in Hampstead. On the other side, we have the progressives who insist that food writing is the new frontier of narrative art, a claim that might carry more weight if they didn't say the same thing about graphic novels last week and about Twitter threads the week before.
I say this: the only thing more ridiculous than a food novel winning the Booker is the ensuing debate about whether it deserves to have won. The critics are all furiously typing their think-pieces, each one more self-important than the last. They will declare the novel "a landmark in gastroliterature" or "a hollow calorie-free confection." They will dissect its use of the semicolon with the same fervor they might apply to the proper temperature for serving Châteauneuf-du-Pape. And in the end, no one will have changed their mind, but everyone will have eaten a lot of very expensive cheese at the launch party.
I have not read this book. I will not read this book. I am too busy drinking gin and observing the sheer magnificent absurdity of a world where a man can win a literary prize for describing the caramelization of onions. But I can tell you this: if you want a truly innovative story about food, go to any British motorway service station and watch a lorry driver try to eat a cold pasty with one hand while driving. That is a story. That is art. That is the real Britain.
As for the critics, they can keep their "innovative storytelling." I'll be here, eating a sandwich and praying for the downfall of the literary-industrial complex.








