The Devil's Cup: Coffee, the Driving Force in History
Author(s): Stewart Lee Allen
This comprehensive work provides an account of caffeine's impact on humankind. Beginning in Ethiopia, the author sails along the same route that carried the first beans to Yemen 1500 years ago, and literally travels the world in his mission to prove that coffee is the driving force in history. Paperback 231pp h196mm x w129mm 196g First published 1999; this edition 2000.
Product Information
* this is lively, interesting stuff, laced with dry wit and canny observations. Scotland on Sunday * Stewart Lee Allen certainly delivers ... he cuts a caffeine-fuelled arc that runs from coffee's Ethiopian origins, through its Arabian distillation, across its European domestication, before terminating in a cross-country search for the worst cup of American coffee ... a funny book that takes some funny routes. The Independent * Two parts travelogue and history to one part caffeine-fuelled theory ... From the genteel cafes of Vienna to wired, late night email conversations on the internet, the book celebrates coffee's ability to sharpen the mind and give society a jolt. Not just mocha do about nothing. The Face * I loved this informal bio of the humble cup of joe... Allen's funky history provides the answer and sets the standard. Sunday Herald
Currently living in Brooklyn, Stewart Lee Allen has also called California, Kathmandu, Sydney, San Cristobel, Calcutta and San Francisco home. When not lounging about a cafe in a far-flung corner of the globe, he has worked as a grape-picker, theatrical director, bathroom attendant, grave-digger, punk musician, smuggler and, of course, a writer. He is the author of the award-winning fiction collection The Art of Rape as well as his acclaimed history of coffee, The Devil's Cup.
General Fields
- :
- : canong
- : canong
- : 0.204
- : 01 June 2001
- : 198mm X 129mm X 15mm
- : United Kingdom
- : books
Special Fields
- : Stewart Lee Allen
- : Paperback
- : 106
- : 641.3373
- : 240