Like Eloise growing up in the Plaza Hotel, Charlotte Silver grew up  in her mother's restaurant. Located in Harvard Square, Upstairs at the  Pudding was a confection of pink linen tablecloths and twinkling  chandeliers, a decadent backdrop for childhood. Over dinners of foie  gras and Dover sole, always served with a Shirley Temple, Charlotte  kept company with a rotating cast of eccentric staff members. After  dinner, in her frilly party dress, she often caught a nap under the bar  until closing time. Her one constant was her glamorous, indomitable  mother, nicknamed "Patton in Pumps," a wasp-waisted woman in cocktail  dress and stilettos who shouldered the burden of raising a family and  running a kitchen. Charlotte's unconventional upbringing takes its  toll, and as she grows up she wishes her increasingly busy mother were  more of a presence in her life. But when the restaurant-forever  teetering on the brink of financial collapse-looks as if it may finally  be closing, Charlotte comes to realize the sacrifices her mother has  made to keep the family and restaurant afloat and gains a new  appreciation of the world her mother has built.
Infectious, charming, and at times wistful, Charlotte au  Chocolat is a celebration of the magic of a beautiful presentation  and the virtues of good manners, as well as a loving tribute to the  author's mother-a woman who always showed her best face to the world.