“This is a rich ethnography, steeped in the literatures on emotion, the body, and place… For those looking for holistic ethnographies for teaching purposes, this book could be easily incorporated into advanced undergraduate or graduate courses. In our neoliberal times, it will be especially eye-opening for students to see the intensely social nature of Bosmun food practices. It will also reward scholars interested in thinking through current anthropological approaches to foodways in relationship to kinship, gender, place, and emotional experience.” · Food and Foodways“von Poser’s book offers up a fascinating, keenly observed account of the ways in which Bosmun people view and assess one another’s hunger.” · Pacific Affairs“The book contains fascinating material from an under-represented area in the ethnographic coverage of PNG. It also contains excellent ideas and analysis…[and] presents some sensitively written ethnography, dwelling on an important element of kinship relations (feelings of amity, sympathy, and emotional connection) between persons. The main thrust of the text is to link these key elements of kinship to sago production, food sharing and exchange, movement, and myth. This is valuable and fascinating.” · James Leach, University of Aberdeen“This is a very valuable work that greatly advances anthropology’s understanding of empathy and its expression through sharing food. It provides a detailed ethnographic case study of these phenomena that is thoroughly grounded in the comparative and current theoretical anthropological literature on these topics.” · Roger Lohmann, Trent University