March 25, 2026
Will This Make You Happy, by Tanya Bush

With this book, I’ve finally succeeded in my goal of becoming a person who reads cookbooks cover to cover, although it helps that Tanya Bush’s Will This Make You Happy is as much narrative as recipe collection. The recipes themselves are just a little bit fussy (as opposed to no-fuss) in a way I find most appealing at the moment, having to go out of my way for an ingredient or two, realizing that the effort makes a difference, that it’s worth the reward. Like the malted milk power in the banana bread, which I’ve already made twice, once with the glaze, and once without, which just offers the most wonderful edge to the overall sweetness. I’m dying to try the recipe for blueberry jam corn muffin next, and don’t know where I can begin to source sweet corn powder, but I’m not giving up just yet. The point of the story, these recipes, is to venture out of one’s comfort zone, try something new, to indulge your appetites, see how much the world can hold.
Will This Make You Happy (intriguingly with no question mark) is organized by season, a collection of vignettes about the author’s life followed by a bunch of recipes loosely based on those mentioned in the narrative. When the book begins, Bush is 23, which for me was the year upon which everything hinged, and she’s stuck in a depressive malaise. Unemployed, too comfortable in her relationship, she longs for something more, and finds it on a whim when she bakes a cake to change to her mood. The first cake collapses, a veritable disaster, but she finds more success with banana bread, discovering the way forward in her tiny New York kitchen, and she begins to consider a future in baking.
The path ahead is not straightforward. She partakes in an internship of sorts in Italy, which proves to be a dispiriting time, rife with annoyances and disappointment. She wants she wants she wants, but getting doesn’t always make her happy, there is always something hard, there is always something more, and this continues to be the case when she ventures outside of her long-term relationship to pursue a crush on a woman she meets through a connection at her restaurant job. Her boyfriend is patient, but he has his limits too, and in love, and life, and eating, the question continues to be, What do I want? How much is enough? How will I know when I get there?
With gorgeous illustrations by Forsyth Harmon, Will This Make You Happy is a story about wandering and wondering in search of sweetness, listening to your heart, and discovering that settling isn’t necessarily a bad thing.




