Read Alicia Bessette's blogs and view other content on the Penguin Community. Alicia Bessette writes with compassion and tenderness to illuminate the many unexpected ways people save each others' lives every day-often without even knowing it. Poignant, bittersweet, and strikingly honest, Simply from Scratch is a radiant celebration of friendship and the strength of the human spirit. Rose-Ellen ("Zell") Carmichael Roy wears her late husband Nick's camouflage apron even when she's not in the kitchen. That's her widow style. It's been over a year since Nick died tragically during a post-Katrina relief mission in New Orleans. Long enough, according to the grief pamphlets, to have begun to move on with her life. But Zell is still unable to enter her attic, which is full of Nick memories. She hasn't even turned on her oven because cooking was Nick's chore. That is, until she decides to enter the first annual Desserts that Warm the Soul baking contest, hoping to donate the grand prize to Katrina survivors in Nick's memory. Meanwhile, Zell's nine-year-old neighbor, Ingrid Knox, is learning to cope with the loneliness of growing up without a mother. With an imagination as big as her heart, Ingrid treasures her doting father but begins to plot how she will meet the woman who abandoned her so many years ago. When an embarrassing baking mishap brings Zell and Ingrid together, they form an unlikely friendship that will alter both of their lives forever. Together, and with the help of a lively and loveable cast of friends and family, Zell and Ingrid embark on winning the Desserts that Warm the Soul contest - and learn that through the many sorrows and joys of life, with a little bit of flour and a pinch of love, anything is possible. Watch a Video Marisa De los Santos Reviews Simply from Scratch The bestselling author of Love Walked In , Marisa De los Santos is an award-winning poet with a Ph.D. in literature and creative writing. She lives in Wilmington, Delaware, with her husband and children. When I began Alicia Bessette’s Simply from Scratch , I understood immediately that it would contain no easy cures for pain. Consolation would not be sudden or free, swooping down to scoop up Zell—or anyone else because she is not the only character in the book who has suffered an awful loss—in its redemptive arms. From the opening sentences—“I knot Nick’s camouflage apron under my boobs, unable to remember the last time I wore a bra, or preheated an oven. That’s my widow style”—I knew that Zell was a woman who would tough it out. Her grief is singularly unromantic: daily, matter-of-fact, weary, intensely personal, punctuated by wry humor and tiny heart attacks. She is blindsided by “Memory Smacks” that transport her, reeling, into random, ordinary moments from her marriage to Nick, who died while on a relief mission to New Orleans, following Katrina, his death just another small, immeasurably huge loss amidst rampant tragedy. All of which is to say that her grief is authentic. All of her is authentic. I fell for Zell. As I read, she was a person I knew, a good person who was not always nice, a strong person who was occasionally helpless, a generous person who could be frustratingly unforgiving. She doesn’t move straight through grief. She zigzags, circles back, gets in her own way. She is human, quirky as all of us are quirky, ordinary and miraculous at the same time. And she has friends. Wow, we should all have such friends. This book tells a lot of different kinds of stories, but the one that resonated most with me as I read, the one that still sticks with me is its story of friendship, that simple, workaday kind of love that’s as sacred as any kind. Russ, France, Dennis, EJ (sweet, sweet EJ): I loved them through the whole book and love them still. Zell is lucky to have them. So am I. --Marisa De los Santos A Q&A with Alicia Bessette Q: As a journalist, you reported on the relief efforts following Hurricane Katrina. What about that experience inspired you to write Simply from Scratch ? A: In my hometown of Holden, Massachusetts, I was hired at a small, community-centered newspaper ( The Landmark ) soon after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans. For months, my colleagues and I wrote feature stories about the people in our area of New England who traveled to New Orleans to help rebuild its churches, schools, and libraries. They returned home very moved by what they’d seen and experienced. Long after I wrote about these volunteers, their words replayed in my mind. I knew I wasn't done writing about them. Eventually, the novelist’s question came to mind: What if? What if one of those volunteers didn’t make it home to Massachusetts? Characters were born, and my debut novel grew from there. Q: It’s commonly believed that writers write from experience. What about Simply from Scratch is based on your own personal experience? Are there characters who embody people