Wine Book Reviews
Updated June, 2008 - Jack
The Billionaire’s Vinegar: The Mystery of the World's Most Expensive Bottle of Wine
by Benjamin Wallace
Okay, so I had no idea that the Jefferson bottle fraud thing had been going on for so long, and it was quite interesting to read so many of the details. The Billionaire’s Vinegar is a quick read, but, it wasn’t that fun to read. For example, the book ends without an epilogue and overall the writing style is just a bit dry for me. I also think the title is a poor choice.
Still, I can recommend this book; if the subject matter interests you (i.e., the selling of Bordeaux purchased by “Th.J.” (Thomas Jefferson)). After reading it, if you weren’t certain if there was a decent amount of fraud in high end wine auctions, you’ll not be uncertain anymore.
The House of Mondavi: The Rise and Fall of an American Wine Dynasty
by Julia Flynn Siler
Here’s a book that I really wasn’t interested in, and ended up finding quite compelling. It’s the happy and sad story of the very dysfunctional Mondavi family. The book is long, but the story is engaging and well-written. At almost 400 pages, it’s a serious investment in time; but it would be great for reading on an airplane. The House of Mondavi is worth your time. I will watch for books by Ms. Siler in the future. Recommended.
Passion on the Vine: A Memoir of Food, Wine, and Family in the Heart of Italy
by Sergio Esposito
A quick read, Passion on the Vine recounts some of the travels and life story of Sergio Esposito, proprietor of (perhaps) the best Italian wine store in the U.S.
This book is fun at times and three chapters were very enjoyable (incl. Movia and Fiorano), but the book seems short. There’s too much “What We Ate That Day” that is really not at all interesting to read about. Overall, this book is worth reading but a bit of a let-down. Next time, Sergio, let your hair down and let loose.
A Moveable Thirst: Tales and Tastes from a Season in Napa Wine Country
by Rick Kushman and Hank Beal
The Great: A really great Napa wine country visitor's guide featuring in-depth profiles to 141 Napa Valley tasting rooms. Wineries are profiled in an innovative and useful way: atmosphere, service, tasting tools, intangibles, wine availability, picnic prospects, cost, directions, and recommendations. As this is a new release, its information and hours are up-to-date. It's also a pretty lightweight paperback.
Not So Great: It doesn’t cover Sonoma, just Napa. The first part of this book is a diary-style journal of the author’s trips to wine country - which, makes for some light reading, with the occasional smile, but it never gets seriously fun or interesting. Still, this book is better than I expected and I can recommend it to the casual wine country visitor/explorer. 
Italian Wines 2007
by Gambero Rosso
Every year I purchase Italian Wines and it’s the one wine book that I refer to the most. I even look at previous editions when looking up a wine being auctioned, so even though it’s an annual edition, I find it an essential addition to my wine reference library.
Pros: Very comprehensive – most every winery I look up is in there, and usually the wine I’m looking for is as well. The 2007 edition covers 2200 wineries. Italian Wine uses a 0 to 3 glass rating scale (the zeros never get mentioned). What is great is that regions like Alto Adige are given their due rather than the book being a lovefest for Tuscany or Piedmonte.
Cons: There are still some important wineries not in the book (such as, in 2007, Vodopivec and Paolo Bea). The review of each wine is often too short, and doesn’t clue you in on whether it should be drunk soon or needs aging. There’s also this strange bit of snarkiness against organic and biodynamic wines (see the first paragraph of the Kuenhof page). Plus, some wineries make many different wines (such as San Michelle Appiano) and need more than a half page, but never get such; meaning good wines are missing because the winery makes more wines than other wineries. Yet some minor wineries get an entire half page.
Improvements Needed: You have to use the Index at the back because the book is organized by region and then by town(!). This is just so unhelpful! I would prefer that it was sorted by winery name. Meanwhile, the Index is the one thing that never improves; you never know for sure where the winery will be listed in the Index – under first name, last name, or ? Also in the Index, the page# is not right next to the winery name, (there are no leading dots or divisions every five, or anything to make it easier for you) making it very hard to navigate.
Summation: Needs to evolve into an online database.

The 2008 Edition is out now

The Wines of France:
The Essential Guide for Savvy Shoppers
By Jacqueline Friedrich
Jacqueline Friedrich is the author who wrote the wonderful, now classic, A Wine and Food Guide to the Loire. You may also have enjoyed her articles in the New York Times Travel section. Her new work is a portable $20 trade paperback guide book to French wineries. It is designed for shopping for French wines or dining in French restaurants (esp. in France).
The book is organized (including handy tabs!) into wine regions of France. That’s good. Within each section, wineries, appellations, and grape varietals are jumbled together, alphabetically. I believe the thinking here was that a wine novice won’t necessarily know what’s what, and so it would help them most if the book was organized this way. And, sometimes this is helpful. But, too often you’ll need to check the index to find what you’re looking for because, for example, Pascal Cotat is listed on page 232 and François Cotat (cousin who’s winery is adjacent, shares same vineyards, etc., etc.) is on page 257 (listed under Sancerre rather than alphabetically like Pascal). To someone like me, this is maddening! Yet, I think they ended up doing this so that they could include a lot more wineries – which, is really what’s most important. All of the wineries listed are ones the author is willing to drink a glass of. Starred wineries are ones she really likes.
I like that Bordeaux doesn’t dominate the book and that many very good but obscure producers are mentioned – and naming her favorites from these wineries. Still, I think it’s very strange that Vincent Girardin is not in the book, one of the most popular Burgundy negociants; nor Magnien, and esp., how can Perrot-Minot not be here - one of the very best?
Overall, I recommend this book, but be advised that it takes an extra bit of effort to get the most out of it.

Parker’s Wine Buyer’s Guide, 6th Edition
by Robert M. Parker, Jr. with Pierre-Antoine Rovani
The best part, and the part to read when you first acquire this book is the 40-page introduction at the front of the book, followed by the introductions to each section of the book (beginning with Alsace). They’re not just well-written, but contain the right information and the right amount of information on most of the wine regions covered in the book.
The rest of the book is devoted to tasting notes on more than 8000 wines from 3000 plus producers that originally appeared in Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate publication. Some of these notes and thoughts have been updated, too. Parker's passions are Bordeaux and the Rhone, and is regarded as the world’s fore-most authority on these wine regions; he has stated that more than 90% of his cellar is France wines.
Some lesser regions/appellations get little space but this is really because the book is already more than 1600 pages. (Where's a supplement?)
A new edition is published about every 3 years and always seem to be worth purchasing.

The New Wine Lover's Companion
by Ron Herbst, Sharon Tyler Herbst
Need to know what varietal is dominant in Priorat red wine? This is the book for you. We once used this book regularly when we kept our own wine cellar database. It’s paperback and portable and very, very informative.
The second part of this book, appendices, is a bit disappointing to me because there are quite a few grape varietals and appellations missing. I guess they can't include everything.
Joanne's comments: "We've referred to this book and its previous edition more than any other wine book. The reason, it’s sort of a real-world dictionary for wine. You have a bottle of some obscure wine that says Corse on it. So what grape(s) are likely to be in this wine? This book has it."
Italian Wines 2005
by Gambero Rosso
Published every year (in Italian and months later, in English), they cover more than 2000 producers and 14,000 wines in the 2005 edition.
The key part of this book is the two indexes in the back of the book. Without them, you’d never find anything you’re looking for. At this point, I seem to be able to find every previous year released Italian wine I’m looking up.
Italian Wines 2005 is a good book, but not a great book. For one, they don’t go into enough detail on the best 10% or so of the wines or wineries. Any very good (or better) Italian winery that makes quite a few different wines gets a bit cheated here; they still only get one half page.
Every wine is also rated one a 0-3 glass scale, based upon other wines made from the same grape(s) in Italy. So, you can’t compare a 3-glass Nebbiolo-based wine to a 3-glass Syrah, for example. The number of wines getting 3-glasses goes up every year; in 1998 (the first English edition), 117 wines got the Three Glass Award – in 2005 264 wines. The wines are rated by 30 panels of 5 judges each. So, like all ratings, look at them as an indication of quality rather than being sure you’ll like them.