
The Taste of Conquest
The Rise and Fall of the Three Great Cities of Spice
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Narrated by:
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Todd McLaren
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By:
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Michael Krondl
About this listen
Written in a colorful style that will appeal to fans of Mark Kurlansky and Michael Pollan, this ambitious yet accessible book travels effortlessly from the Crusades to the present day. Michael Krondl explains that it was the desire for spices that got international trade up and running on a scale that had never occurred prior to that time. This explosive growth of the spice trade led to the successive rise and fall of Venice, Lisbon, and Amsterdam.
Krondl, a gifted food writer, travels to each of these great cities and begins his visit with a great meal. Gradually, he merges the menu he's enjoying with the city's colorful past, and listeners are off on a gastronomical tour that teaches them not only about food and spice but also about history and commerce.
©2007 Michael Krondl (P)2007 Tantor Media Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
What listeners say about The Taste of Conquest
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Overall
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Performance
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- Book Maverick
- 07-12-13
Sloppy narrator
Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?
There were so many food-related mis-pronunciations by the narrator that is was annoying: galangale, confit. Not very good research or practice and his part and sloppy editing!
In general, the book was well written and kept my attention, but I will avoid other works narrated by Todd McLaren.
Who would you have cast as narrator instead of Todd McLaren?
Someone with food knowledge
Was The Taste of Conquest worth the listening time?
Historical significance
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2 people found this helpful
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- LAMBROS LAMBROU
- 12-13-20
Interesting and informative
I enjoyed listening to this book very much! It's interesting and informative, but also quite entertaining. The Medieval and Renaissance passion for spices is well known, but the fascinating details of the spice trade are less so. Todd McLaren's narration was great, with perfect pacing, a suitable tone (humorous and serious, according to the needs of the text) and an easy conversational style that I personally find extremely engaging in an audiobook narration.
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- R. Cryan
- 01-16-17
Lazy narrator
The narrator of this book is fine for the most part, and would be an excellent narrator for an American story with all American names and characters and places.
However, he didn't bother to learn many of the foreign pronunciations in this book, mispronouncing Joao, Felipe, Jan, and a dozen other personal and place names I recognized, and I don't know how many that I don't know any better about. This is a problem for a book about foreign lands and foods.
(Some of his foreign accents were way off, as well, but that's a minor issue.)
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1 person found this helpful
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- John Arteaga
- 08-10-17
Foodies
The book was excellent read and a must for food lovers and/ or foodies. Enjoyed it
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Overall
- Art
- 12-24-09
Not bad
Author interview on the radio was more fascinating than book. Was looking for a little more history and a little less spice.
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3 people found this helpful
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Overall
- EmperorTab
- 10-19-08
Not that bad.
I thought this was actually an interesting book. I'm interested in Venetian and Portuguese history, and this has some interesting insights. Also, the spice trade is a fascinating historical episode. The author obviously knows what he is talking about when it comes to food, and it is a novel idea having a chef as a historian working through food.
I have to agree with the other reviewers, though... the narrator can't pronounce his way out of a wet paper bag. But, I guess I'm more inclined to overlook something like that if the book itself is intersting.
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7 people found this helpful
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- Jason Mraz
- 09-06-20
Great history of spices & of Venice, Lisbon and Amsterdam
The Taste of Conquest does an excellent job of summarizing the history of the spice trade in Western Europe. Krondl’s research makes the history come to life - feels like reading a food channel special
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- Gypsi
- 10-31-23
Light but Interesting
In this nonfiction, Krondl gives the history of the spice trade through the three most important spice trading cities of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: Venice, Lisbon, and Amsterdam. It's easy to follow and, though light, still informative and enjoyable.
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Overall
- Mair
- 04-03-08
not so tasty
Although I heard the author interviewed on the radio where he and the subject sounded fascinating, we were not enthralled with the book or the reader. The book seemed in serious need of an editor. And the reader had such strange pronunciations on words in French, Italian, Spanish and - yes - even English that we were being constantly thrown off balance. After about an hour, we gave it up as a loss. Alas.
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6 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Elza
- 05-02-08
Not spicey.
With a subject as interesting as the history of spice, this was unfortunately a bit of a dull listen. However the pronunciation of the reader was annoying at times especially with the Dutch words which could not even be recognized by a native speaker. Why not check with someone prior to venturing out on a project like this?
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6 people found this helpful