Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Your Table is Ready

 Book 94 of my 2023 Reading Challenge
read from September 18 - October 10

Your Table is Ready: Tales of a New York City Maitre D'
by Michael Cecchi-Azzolina

Summary (via Goodreads)
From the glamorous to the entitled, from royalty to the financially ruined, everyone who wanted to be seen―or just to gawk―at the hottest restaurants in New York City came to places Michael Cecchi-Azzolina helped run. His phone number was passed around among those who wanted to curry favor, during the decades when restaurants replaced clubs and theater as, well, theater in the most visible, vibrant city in the world.

Besides dropping us back into a vanished time, Your Table Is Ready takes us places we’d never be able to get into on our own: Raoul's in Soho with its louche club vibe; Buzzy O’Keefe’s casually elegant River Café (the only outer-borough establishment desirable enough to be included in this roster), from Keith McNally’s Minetta Tavern to Nolita’s Le Coucou, possibly the most beautiful room in New York City in 2018, with its French Country Auberge-meets-winery look and the most exquisite and enormous stands of flowers, changed every three days.

From his early career serving theater stars like Tennessee Williams and Dustin Hoffman at La Rousse right through to the last pre-pandemic-shutdown full houses at Le Coucou, Cecchi-Azzolina has seen it all. In Your Table Is Ready , he breaks down how restaurants really run (and don’t), and how the economics work for owners and overworked staff alike. The professionals who gravitate to the business are a special, tougher breed, practiced in dealing with the demanding patrons and with each other, in a very distinctive ecosystem that’s somewhere between a George Orwell “down and out in….” dungeon and a sleek showman’s smoke-and-mirrors palace.

My Opinion
2 stars

Maybe it's because the lifestyle is so far removed from mine or maybe it's because it sounds too good to be true but the stories were pretty unbelievable.  Everything always works out for him no matter the choices?  He does acknowledge the changes in the industry and culture and happily seems to think the progress is a good thing.

When I read in the epilogue that he was getting ready to finally start his own restaurant I looked it up and am very happy to see it's still up and running.  I'm sure his experience, people skills, and recognition of talent are big reasons why.

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