A review by pinkacorn
Good Enough to Eat by Stacey Ballis

2.0

I liked how each chapter started with a memory tied to a recipe. I haven't lost 1/2 my weight so I don't understand the fascination with touching base with a food counselor by phone. I didn't get the sense that the attachments to people were real - for example, the younger sister who lives in Paris and doesn't talk to her forever, but then flies in for a FakeGiving? This seemed contrived as did most of the other relationships she'd formed either before or during the book. Also the 47 year old hunk in the story was too sweet - guys just don't act that way in real life, even when you are sick.