Jessica B. Harris holds a PhD from NYU and taught English at Queens College for more than thirty years. She lectures internationally. She is the author of High on the Hog, which inspired the hit 2021 Netflix show of the same name. She is also the author of a memoir, My Soul Looks Back, as well as twelve cookbooks. Her articles have appeared in Vogue, Food & Wine, Essence, and The New Yorker, among other publications. She has made numerous television and radio appearances and has been profiled in The New York Times. Considered one of the preeminent scholars of the food of the African Diaspora, Harris has been inducted into the James Beard Who’s Who in Food and Beverage in America, she received the James Beard Lifetime Achievement Award in 2020, and an Augie Award from the Culinary Institute of America in 2022. She also received an honorary doctorate from Johnson & Wales University and recently helped the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture to conceptualize its cafeteria.
"[N]ever, to this reader, uninteresting ... “My Soul Looks
Back” has a simmering warmth."
—The New York Times
"Eloquent and infinitely delightful."
—Essence
"Harris intimately reflects on her friendships with these
fascinating individuals and their social circle, capturing an era
that was vibrant with creativity, art, activism, and intellectual
life."
—Buzzfeed
"My Soul Looks Back is a great New York City memoir; I thought
of James Wolcott’s Lucking Out and Patti
Smith’s Just Kids, both documents of the city in the
seventies, as well as books from an earlier New York, like Anatole
Broyard’s Kafka Was the Rage and Mary Cantwell’s Manhattan, When I
Was Young ... I finished the book eager to find a noisy
neighborhood restaurant where the wine is served in mismatched
glasses and the specials are under twenty dollars."
—Epicurious
"[Harris] is a born storyteller and her memoir is a joy to read—a
beautiful portrait of a remarkable era."
—Charleston Gazette-Mail
"A friend of celebrated authors Maya Angelou and James Baldwin,
Harris was part of a fascinating social circle in the early ’70s.
She shares a unique look at their lives and work, while also
opening up about her own career and relationship with one of
Baldwin’s colleagues. As a bonus, each chapter has a related
recipe."
—Bustle
"Harris's culinary expertise winds through her stories, and each
chapter ends with a recipe, including her mother's Sunday roast
chicken and Goujonnettes de Sole with Ersatz Sauce Gribiche,
inspired by her favorite after-opera meal. No doubt a few of
Harris's friends have been saying for years that she had to write
this memoir, and if so, they were right."
—Shelf Awareness
"This is a lively, entertaining, and informative recounting of a
time and place that shaped and greatly enriched American
culture."
—Publishers Weekly
"Scenic and engaging, My Soul Looks Back recounts the
years author Jessica B. Harris spent on the periphery of a circle
of friends that included literary powerhouses James Baldwin, Maya
Angelou, and Toni Morrison. The memoir spans the globe and several
decades to describe the fascinating group."
—Kirkus Reviews
"Come for the insight into the circle of friends that first
resolved around James Baldwin, then shifted orbit to revolve around
Maya Angelou. Stay because you're enraptured by the candid,
passionate woman narrating from the periphery. This is an intimate
look at an inner circle of Black writers, scholars, and glamazons
moving through the middle of the twentieth century and into the
twenty-first, told with bold tenderness by a woman who grew up in
their company, under their gaze."
—Alice Randall, author of Ada's Rules and The Wind
Done Gone
"At table, before a lectern, or on the page, no matter where we
encounter Jessica B. Harris, she commands our attention. My
Soul Looks Back, her most intimate book, showcases an era when the
Black artistic elite flowered and Jessica, along with her love Sam
Floyd, lunched with Maya Angelou in California, shared popcorn with
James Baldwin in the South of France, and nurtured a social
aesthetic that spangled, all too briefly, beneath the kliegs."
—John T. Edge, author of The Potlikker Papers: A Food History
of the Modern South
"In My Soul Looks Back, Jessica Harris uses her amazing
griot voice and exquisite writing skills to take the reader with
her on a serendipitous journey filled with everything from a
sampling of her unique culinary creations to up-close-and-personal
looks at some of the world's most renowned arists—from James
Baldwin, aka Jimmy, to the inner circle she was allowed into by her
mysterious lover, Sam. A tour de force that holds its own among the
great memoirs of all time."
—Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Emmy Award-winning journalist and author
of In My Place
"Jessica Harris takes you on a magical journey through the streets
of New York, through a distinctive and historical era."
—Pat Mikell, of Mikell's jazz club
"I devoured Jessica B. Harris's My Soul Looks Back as
though it were one of the feasts she describes in its
pages—brimming with food, wine, wit, and wisdom. This luminouus and
illuminating memoir is also a song of love and praise to the heyday
of bohemian, intellectual New York, and especially to the African
American arts and literature community that has supplied the city
with so much of its brilliance and vibrancy."
—Rosie Schaap, author of Drinking with Men
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