
WATCH: UC s Edible Books Festival a Worldly Celebration
UC Libraries hosted its ninth-annual International Edible Books Festival on April 1, with edible creations ranging from childrens books to literary classics and works of art.
View the Slide Show of the UC International Edible Books Festival
UC Libraries Dean and University Librarian Victoria Montavon emceed the event, noting there were nearly two dozen entries for 2010 created by UC librarians, students and staff.
The creations were judged by Mark Palkovic, head of the Albino Gorno Memorial Music Library, and A&S student Nayla Pica, a student peer mentor for Langsam Librarys Info Commons. Each of them was awarded in different categories.
The Best Overall category was awarded to Suzette Combs, director, Pre-Professional Advising Center, and Marie Knecht, program coordinator, UC Parents Association, for their edible interpretation of Caps for Sale, by Esphyr Slobodkina. The Best Overall Student Category was awarded to A&S student James Finnigan, for his edible creation of The Revenge of the Teachers Pet, by Darrin Doyle. The creation included a caramel-filled poison apple and a chocolate-filled syringe.
The entry, A Day No Pigs Would Die, created by DAAP student Jacob Gartin, included a description of the ingredients, which were vegan and all-kosher. Book creators representing the College of Law Library jokingly wore face masks around their creation, Toxic Torts in a Nutshell.
People have outdone themselves once again. Its just such a fun event, said Montavon.
The International Edible Book Festival Web site states the festival was initiated by librarian and artist Judith A. Hoffberg. It became an international sensation in 2000 when artist Béatrice Coron launched the Books2Eat Web site. Traditionally, the event is celebrated on April 1 to mark the birthday of Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin (1755-1826), a French lawyer and politician who became famous for his book, Physiologie du goût (The Physiology of Taste). Only a few rules apply the event must be celebrated on or near April Fools Day, creations must be edible, and they must reflect a literary work.
Cleanup from the event went quickly. After the awards were announced, the displays were devoured. Here were the entries in UCs 2010 International Edible Books Festival:
Edible Books Participants 2010
(Listed by prize, creator, title some with an edible twist and author)
Most Deadly
Susan Boland, associate librarian, College of Law Library Toxic Torts in a Nutshell, by Jean Macchiaroli Eggen
Long Overdue
Katrina Bowling-Bergman, circulation and student supervisor for the UC Chemisty-Biology Library 2010: Cake Odyssey II
Best Written
Stephanie Bricking, research associate, Health Sciences Library If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, by Laura Numeroff
Most Romantic
Megan Carroll, assistant, Web Communications Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith
Best Overall
Suzette Combs, director, Pre-Professional Advising Center, and Marie Knecht, program coordinator, UC Parents Association Caps for Sale, by Esphyr Slobodkina
caps
Most Clever
Jessica Ebert, preservation services, Langsam Library If You Give a Cat a Cupcake, by Laura Numeroff
Best Use of Ingrediants/Best Overall Student Category
A&S student James Finnigan The Revenge of the Teachers Pet, by Darrin Doyle
Most Whimsical
DAAP student Jacob Gartin A Day No Pigs Would Die, by Robert Newton Peck
Most Edible
Katie Joyce, Social Work student Animal Farm, by George Orwell
Best Written
Sarah Maguire and College of Engineering and Applied Science student Brian McLaughlin Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, by J.K. Rowling
Most Checked Out
Sarah Maguire and College of Engineering and Applied Science student Brian McLaughlin Harry Potter and the Deathly Mallows, by J.K. Rowling
Most Ambitious
Sara Mihaly, library associate, DAAP Library Obey: Supply and Demand, the Art of Shepard Fairey
Most Well Crafted
Lauren Mills, program coordinator, UC Libraries The Mad Hatters Hat from Alice in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll
Most Hysterical
Linda Newman, associate senior librarian, UC Libraries Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal, by Eric Schlosser
Most Memorable
Linda Newman, associate senior librarian, UC Libraries Disintegration of Persistence of Memory, by Salvador Dali.
cat
Truest to Form
Melissa Cox Norris, director of library communications, UC Libraries The Thorn Birds, by Colleen McCullough
Most Gruesome
Holly Prochaska, head, Geology-Mathematics-Physics Library In Cold Blood, by Truman Capote
Most Literary
Holly Prochaska, head, Geology-Mathematics-Physics Library Duck! Rabbit! by Amy Krouse Rosenthal and Tom Lichtenheld
Most Inspirational
Edith Starbuck, senior research associate, Health Sciences Library, Marilyn Wehri, and Marty Harrington Guess the title, which was Race to the South Pole
Most Creative
Deborah Weinstein, director, business affairs, Student Affairs and Services Where is the Green Sheep? by Mem Fox and Judy Horacek
Most Childish
Josh, Katie, Livie and Tim Zack (family of Senior Librarian Debbie Tenofsky) The Ultimate Lego Book
In addition to celebrations around the United States, the 2010 International Edible Books Festival included celebrations in Australia, Canada, Ireland, Italy, Singapore and Sweden.
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