Thursday, March 25, 2010

April Pick/ TRUE CONFECTIONS




By Katharine Weber

Candy, candy, candy! How sweet it is! Or so it may seem, but when you run a family owned candy company, there can be bitter with the sweet.

So goes the novel, "True Confections" by Katharine Weber. It's the story of the Ziplinsky family and the candy company, Zip's that they have run since it began in 1910. But this story is told in a somewhat unique way, in the form of a written affidavit by Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky, the wife of Howard, who is the great-grandson of Eli, a Hungarian immigrant and founder of Zip's.

"True Confections" is not only the story about candy, although there are quite a few side stories about candy-making, ingredients, and the novel even mentions some real-life candy companies, like Mars and Hershey's and their histories. The novel also tells the story of immigrants making new lives for themselves in a new world. The threat of WWII on the European Jewish community and families being separated, and even the Third Reich's plan to establish a compound on of Madagascar for the exiled Jewish people. It's also the story of an outsider looking in, wanting to belong and finally becoming a part of the family. It's about running a business and moving it forward into the future while still trying to stay true to the past.

Now don't worry. Even though the novel is written as an affidavit, it is not filled with a bunch of legalese. Bouncing back and forth between the present and the past, Alice tells the story of the Czaplinsky brothers and their candy. She explains the dynamics of this family as a family member but also as a business woman looking out for her company and her children's' inheritance. There is humor and warmth to the story also as it covers the universal themes of family, love, and betrayal.
















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