Spotted Pigs and Green Tomatoes: A Year in the Life of Our Farm
|
| List Price: | £7.99 |
| Price: | £5.15 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
48 new or used available from £0.01
Average customer review:Product Description
After leaving the editorship of the "Daily Express", Rosie Boycott wasn't sure what to do next. A terrible car accident forced her to rethink her life, turning her in a direction she would never have previously imagined. Working a small farm in Somerset proves a daunting task, but Rosie and her new husband Charlie are determined, and their immersion in rural living, hilarious and profoundly moving, reaps rewards they never expected. Pigs, ducks and geese are fattened for the butcher; vegetables and cut flowers are grown for a reluctant marketplace; and Rosie and Charlie discover much about the hard graft of running a smallholding. They learn too about weightier issues that affect the local community of Ilminster - particularly the new supermarket that threatens the soul of the local town centre. And Rosie finds recovery in the rhythms of the seasons.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #57714 in Books
- Published on: 2008-06-02
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 320 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'TV's The Good Life meets Richard Benson's The Farm, with Fast Food Nation and Tescopoly thrown in for good measure' Observer Food Monthly 'Boycott is admirably, wincingly honest and her reflections on the calming effects of her rural environment will chime with many people in both town and country' Richard Benson, Mail on Sunday 'Compelling stuff, a poignant message for those who remain oblivious to how food is produced' Observer 'This delightful account of her odyssey will chime with anyone sick of tasteless, expensive supermarket produce and confirm her reputation as a thoroughly good egg' Daily Mail
Spectator, 26 May 2007
'Rosie Boycott emerges as a thoroughly good egg: hardworking,
loyal and kind. She is interested in everything around her, from church
spires to why robin's eggs are blue, to the history of walled gardens'
Richard Benson, Mail on Sunday Newstatesman, 21 May 2007
'It is a unique combination of insight into British farming, the
media, and "pigscapades"'
Customer Reviews
What a disappointment
Definitley a case of do not judge a book by its cover. The cover has lovely pictures of pigs and hens as you might expect in a book entitled Our Farm, A year in the life of a small holding. Unfortunately I had to skip read through at least two thirds of the book looking for keys words like vegetable, pig, eggs, to avoid the everpresent autobiographical details of Rosie Boycotts life. Frankly I was not interested in her accident, her problems, her family, her career or her friends which were presented in a meandering rambling style, not to mention the quarter of the book which was given over to her views on the evils of supermarkets. As you can imagine not much room left for the poor old pigs. I shall be donating this book to the school fete as I wouldn't want to waste the space on my bookshelves.
Disjointed ramblings
Very disappointed by this book. Excellent premise but very poor execution. Didn't like the humourless and pontificating style. The author waffles on about anything that comes into her head - for example suddenly talking for 6 pages about visiting a cathedral or about her husband's job as a child abuse lawyer or about some bloke she met 3 years ago etc. These things have nothing to do with the subject of the book - i.e. "Our Farm"! It is not an autobiography.
I also found it nauseating that the author didn't seem very genuine about the subject. They are basically second-homers, sinking tens of thousands into a 'little project in the country' while continuing to travel to London to work. There is really nothing useful to learn from the book - no useful facts or tips about running the farm.
Right message, wrong person?
I must admit to getting a bit fed up with wealthy 'celebrity' types having a go at the rural life as if it were some kind of upmarket fashion accessory. Rosie Boycott will be of course be able to return to comfortable Notting Hill if things don't work out or if some other aspect of our national life becomes more fashionable to have a go at.
Despite this, her message is a good one. The supermarkets bully farmers and producers, planners and councils into monopolising food outlets. They peddle nasty, cheap and downright unhealthy food and can't stand being stood up to by those of us who hate everything they stand for. Together with this, Ms Boycott realises the rather obvious, it's hard to live the life of a smallholder (just not that hard if Notting Hill is your bolt hole).
A hastily written book it seems that promised so much more.



