Beloved for his untamed prose and tales of a wilder America, Jim Harrison was also a man with a larger-than-life appetite, and a writer who knew how to document the pleasures and the punishments of eating. Collecting many of his most colorful and inspired essays, this anthology finds Harrison commenting on a French lunch that went to 37 courses, the obscure language of wine reviews, and the relationship between hunter and prey. Family photos appear throughout, and Harrison's friend Mario Batali contributes a highly entertaining introduction.