Despite the title, there’s no cooking in Laurence Cossé’s fine, actually rather wonderful novel, BITTER ALMONDS.  I loved her book A NOVEL BOOKSTORE, published last year – a literary  thriller about books and bookshops, it managed to be nostalgic and  forward-thinking at the same time. 
 
This one is more delicate. A bookish translator volunteers to teach  her 70-year-old Moroccan cleaner how to read. Words on a page: so easy  to take for granted. But life without them clearly fascinated Cossé. The  result is an intriguing, fact-filled study of life as an immigrant on  the edge of society.