GP ERG: Book Club – Like Water for Chocolate
In the sprawling web of all our venues, Book Club emerged to bring GP employees together. It grew out of our Women’s Employee Resource Group (ERG), a space we carved out to amplify and mentor each other. The ERG has hosted mentorship, networking, and leadership events, often at cultural and historical venues that sparked interesting conversation. Book Club felt like a natural extension – a gender-inclusive group to share stories and ideas. For the launch, we looked for stories about the powerful role of food. We had a shortlist that claimed our attention, but we landed on Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel.
Picking a first book felt like scrolling through a never-ending To Be Read pile in late December. We started with a few contenders: The Kamogawa Food Detectives, a cozy, intrigue-laden escape, My Year of Meats, at the intersection of TV and agriculture, and Sous Chef: 24 Hours on the Line, 300 pages of adrenaline which at absolutely no point takes its foot off the gas. Each had its claim to our attention, but we landed on Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel.
It wasn’t just the food-centric narrative, but it’s both deeply familiar and unexpected. The story follows Tita, the youngest daughter in a rigidly traditional Mexican family. It’s a story we’ve seen countlessly: duty taking precedence over desire, especially in the kitchen – a place long known for confinement to women. Yet, we can understand what it feels like to pour energy and emotions into food. Tita reveals her rage and declaration of selfhood through it. She grows prolific in her cooking which – through the lens of magic realism – finds its power to leave her family weeping, or euphoric, or moved in whatever chaotic ways.
Esquivel touches on a common modern narrative, one with women, in her words, “radically abandoning the kitchen space”. Through Tita, however, she highlights the beauty of reclaiming these traditions on her own terms.
Of course, reading this in the context of the food industry feels a little different. There’s not as much room for catharsis in the middle of a dinner service. Yet, the book plants the idea that food, even in its structured, utilitarian form, carries intense emotion. Part of the pleasure is discovering how this unfolds, and as book club conversations start taking shape, leaves us with plenty to think about.
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