By: Rich Cohen
"Contains lines so heartbreakingly apt and funny I stopped to reread constantly. Cohen is a natural." Jonathan Lethem
Genre: Non-Fiction Memoir
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
April 4, 2006
Featuring:
288 pages
ISBN: 0374272298
Hardcover
Book Summary
Sweet and Low is the amazing, bittersweet, hilarious story
of an American family and its patriarch, a short-order cook
named Ben Eisenstadt who, in the years after World War II,
invented the sugar packet and Sweet'N Low, converting his
Brooklyn cafeteria into a factory and amassing the great
fortune that would destroy his family.
It is also the story of immigrants to the New World, sugar,
saccharine, obesity, and the health and diet craze, played
out across countries and generations but also within the
life of a single family, as the fortune and the factory
passed from generation to generation. The author, Rich
Cohen, a grandson (disinherited, and thus set free, along
with his mother and siblings), has sought the truth of this
rancorous, colorful history, mining thousands of pages of
court documents accumulated in the long and sometimes
corrupt life of the factor, and conducting interviews with
members of his extended family.
Along the way, the forty-year family battle over the fortune moves into its titanic phase, with the money and legacy up for grabs. Sweet and Low is the story of this struggle, a strange comic farce of machinations and double dealings, and of an extraordinary family and its fight for the American dream.