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The Cadence of Grass
The Cadence of Grass
Jan 11, 2026 5:04 PM

Author:Thomas McGuane

The Cadence of Grass

This is the story of the Whitelaws, a family whose values are as far flung as the territory they helped settle, and whose most recent generations have pioneered the landscape of dysfunction. The patriarch, Sunny Jim, exerts his perverse control even posthumously, by means of a last will and testament that binds the family fortune to a marriage that ought, by general consent, to be rent asunder.

The charms of this particular son-in-law, lately released from prison, are potent if short-lived; Evelyn Whitelaw, his estranged wife, is quite literally bedevilled by them. And as her mother and sister court this twisted inheritance, her own yearnings point toward a way of life once habitual on the western plains but now embodied only by Bill Champion, the family's ranch foreman and Evelyn's one true compass.

The Cadence of Grass is at once an elegy and a masterpiece of savage comedy from one of the most compelling novelists writing today.

Reviews

The vivid characterisations of his snapshot prose remain startlingly original and exact... Chilling, bleak, and resonant. McGuane is an inventive writer, and a gifted stylist

—— Guardian

I don't know of another writer who can walk Thomas McGuane's literary high wire...He can describe the sky, a bird, a rock, the dawn, with such grace that you want to go see for your self; then he can zip to a scene so funny that it makes you laugh out loud

—— New York Times Book Review

One of America's most important literary writers, whose prose style has been compared to such American sensibilities as Hemingway and Faulkner

—— Los Angeles Herald Examiner

One of the most original American novelists on either side of the Mississippi

—— Time

I quite fell in love with Isabel. Funny, charming and accident-prone, she is the perfect heroine for today

—— Penny Vincenzi

The ultimate beach novel ... a tale that'll have you giggling

—— Daily Mirror

Ali has chosen a workplace that, though familliar through television shows, remains fascinating, and the kitchen scenes are superb...Ali's prose is often beautiful and there are flashes of Brick Lane's buoyant comedy

—— Observer

Few writers these days can strip characters to their very souls like Ali does

—— Entertainment Weekly

In the Kitchen works best as a novel about work. Ali has done her homework on restaurant kitchens and weaving, and uses both as sustained metaphors for contrasting visions of society: the cohesive social fabric nostalgically remembered by Gabe's father and his peers, and the melting pot of Gabe's kitchen in the contemporary world of deregulated labour.

—— Guardian

Ali lulls us into thinking this will be a conventional enough murder mystery. But to the familiar tale of life in the big city spinning out of control, she brings what Orwell called the "power of facing unpleasant facts" dissecting the body politic with acuity and humour - and confronting unpalatable truths about our selfishness and complicity

—— Times Literary Supplement

In The Kitchen shows Ali returning to the tensions, problems and promises of multicultural Britain...The portrayal of the battle-stations camaraderie and the banter of a top-flight kitchen is the great strength of this novel and the source of much of its humour and interest

—— Literary Review

A fast and fascinating storyteller, sure-footed with plot, pitch-perfect with character, who is also a gimlet-eyed and sharp-tongued political and cultural critic of modern times. Food, love, death, politics, crime, celebrity - all these ingredients are served up by the writer as a fresh and flavoursome literary stir-fy.

—— Saga Magazine

Deeply flawed and wildly sympathetic [...] Gabriel Lightfoot is an unforgettable protagonist, his descent into lunacy frighteningly recognizable, individual, profound

—— O, The Oprah Magazine

Broader storylines are skillfully woven into Gabe's selfish charms. The community of a vanishing textile mill industry in which Gabe grew up is being replaced by multinational and illegal workers, and this naturally works itself into every chapter. But it is the self-destructive Gabe who will keep you turning pages

—— St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Ms. Ali brings a lively intelligence to her work, and her account of Gabriel's mental breakdown, set against shifting scenes of London, is vivid and well done

—— Wall Street Journal

With sometimes sly humor, Ali deftly sheds light on the irony of struggling in a land with abundant opportunities

—— Library Journal

The author of the famed 2003 novel "Brick Lane" has delivered an entertaining, poignant tale

—— Cleveland Plain Dealer

Dazzingly describes the manic goings-on in the kitchen of a central London hotel

—— The Sunday Times

Ali skilfully seasons her stew of a plot ...A cleverly written tale of lust, trafficking and ambition, In the Kitchen has pace and intrigue and a dash of piquant humour.

—— Financial Times
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