Susan Uehara Rakstang, Cooking for Her Eyes – BOOK REVIEW #13
Book Reviews, LiteratureMarc Louis-Boyard
Susan Uehara Rakstang’s Cooking for Her Eyes was released in October 2020, seven years after Julian Barnes’ critically-acclaimed Levels of Life, a title of a similar nature.
In Cooking for Her Eyes, Susan Uehara Rakstang contemplates the different emotional levels of her own past. The book succeeds where most authors and thinkers fail: context matters, and context is a central notion in the book.
To avoid spoilers, we’ll base our review on the first half of the book. Don’t get us wrong: the other half is where the magic happens too.
Susan Uehara Rakstang, Cooking for her Eyes: our review.
Family, told and reconstructed
Family and its multiple dimensions are the definitive background of Cooking for Her Eyes. Sometimes a refuge, sometimes a place of judgement, sometimes a place of solutions, sometimes a place of worry: Susan Uehara Rakstang excelled in giving rythm to the book while transcribing honest and deep impressions of this core of hers.
Her recollections give the reader a valuable reminder: family is precious, personal differences and intergenerational mishaps included.
One of the many powers of this book is that Susan’s family realities will be relatable to a large number of readers while staying genuinely unique, and uncompromising.
Christmas in our house was all about Dennis and me when we were children. Train sets and footballs for him, hula-hoops and dresses for me, and all my aunties in Hawai`i sent us gifts, creating a mountain of presents under and around our Christmas tree. New Year’s, however, was all about the adults.
My family’s Japanese heritage called for a New Year’s Eve party as well as an open house the following day. Throughout the year, but especially during the Christmas and New Year’s holidays, music filled the house.
– Excerpt from Cooking for Her Eyes
The highlight of the bold spirit
Unlike Tony Wilson in the movie 24 Hour Party People, Susan in not a minor character in her own story. Would that mean that the narration is self-centered? Certainly not. Cooking for Her Eyes reaffirms a logical thought full of wisdom: an extraordinary life is made of extraordinary situations and extraordinary people, for better or for worse.
That being said, Susan’s bold spirit is relevantly illustrated, with a strict sense of measure in the choice of words, and with statements oscillating between self-affirmation and humility.
What’s remembered from the book is the author’s resilience and determination against adversity. Far from what could be -maybe awkwardly- considered cheap feminism, Susan’s inspiring force of nature is told and examined, regardless of gender questions after all, eventhough these questions have a sporadic importance.
“You stood up to all those men! Keep doing that. Not one of them took your side, and you voted against them anyway. I’m so proud of you,” she said.
I smiled.
Well, well—so my my mother is a feminist!
– Excerpt from Cooking for Her Eyes
A romanticized past?
Cooking for Her Eyes is a generous invitation, a moving walk through time revealing Susan’s intelligence in terms of character development and attention to the right details. A passionate reading experience is the result: between essential vicissitudes and raw power of the senses, this book is proof of life, undisputably.
About Susan Uehara Rakstang

“I earned my undergraduate degree in Art Education with a minor in Ceramics at Northern Illinois University and in the mid-1970s, began my studies for my Master of Architecture from the University of Illinois, Chicago. After practicing architecture for nearly twenty years, I sold my firm and spent a few years revisiting my love of making pottery and playing the piano. I then accepted a position as University Architect/Associate VP of Facilities at a university in Chicago’s southern suburbs, and after ten great years there, I retired. Over subsequent years, I fell in love with writing–and now I’m the author of COOKING FOR HER EYES!”