Product Details
Extra Virgin: Amongst the Olive Groves of Liguria

Extra Virgin: Amongst the Olive Groves of Liguria
By Annie Hawes

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Product Description

A small stone house deep among the olive groves of Liguria, going for the price of a dodgy second-hand car. Annie Hawes and her sister, on the spot by chance, have no plans whatsoever to move to the Italian Riviera but find naturally that it's an offer they can't refuse. The laugh is on the Foreign Females who discover that here amongst the hardcore olive farming folk their incompetence is positively alarming. Not to worry: the thrifty villagers of Diano San Pietro are on the case, and soon plying the Pallid Sisters with advice, ridicule, tall tales and copious hillside refreshments ...


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #40255 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-04-26
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
There is a natural inclination among lovers of the travel journal genre to compare Annie Hawes's Extra Virgin to the idyllic and idiosyncratic tales by Frances Mayes or Peter Mayle. Don't. Her saga has the well-built flow of fiction and self-effacing honesty of a journal.

Annie and her sister, Sarah, were in their early 20s when they left London for a 10-week job, pruning roses in the mountainous town of Diano San Pietro in Liguria, Italy. While Sarah is the sensible shadow in the book, it is Annie who falls in love withthe place and then the people and coming up on 20 years lives there still.

Youthful mistakes are rectified by a village mystified at the Hawes sisters: mystified that they would want to live in such conditions, that they know so little about olives, wine, food and life and that they are not--horrors--married. Time and time again she is confronted with the reality that is the life of a peasant farmer and in retelling the episodes of her own ignorance, she gives heartfelt flesh and bones to the characters.

Still, Hawes deftly drizzles an observer's scepticism about her adventure. "We gloat about the house, the food, the view, everything, whilst pondering the strange fact that if we saw a representation of this sunset on a postcard we wouldn't buy it. We would think it was tasteless." That she centred the story on the early, impressionable days and the gradual intimacy that developed, gives the book an energy that makes it stand apart. Although the final pages jump haphazardly into the present, Hawes's perspective is instructional about the economic and social changes that in 15 years moved the village from the 19th to the 21st century. Like any story with the ring of truth, Extra Virgin is very much a tale that will age well. --Kathleen Buckley

About the Author
Annie Hawes, originally from Shepherd's Bush, has lived in Liguria now for fifteen years.


Customer Reviews

Not the sappy novel you might expect!5
What a surprise! When my flat mates started raving on about this book I was terribly sceptical expecting a rather trashy " A Year in a Lemon Tree" or some such nonsense. I couldn't have been more wrong and within pages was so hooked that I did not want the book to ever end. In fact I enjoyed it so much that I could go straight back to the beginnig and read it all over again! Annie Hawes has a wonderful style of prose which is most endearing. You are left feeling as if you know all the inhabitants of the village and that Hawes is a friend of a friend who you feel you have always known. Her capitalisation of words like Dirt, and talk of draughts causing life threatening illnesses were especially amusing being a foreigner in a german speaking country obsessed with such matters. Hawes' faux pas were also very close to home Warning if you are hungry or on a diet do not read this book as the descriptions of Ligurian cuisine will break any will. Do however throw caution to the wind and give this book a try and anyway you can always start dieting again afterwards!

Brilliant! If you're at all interested in Italy, buy it.5
This is a wonderful book.

I love Italy. The countryside is beautiful, the towns are amazing and I have enjoyed meeting virtually everyone I have ever met during my time in the country.

Annie Hawes (and her sister) were obviously just as infatuated with the place but, at some point during the 1980's, they were brave enough to take the next logical step and buy an olive grove and a ramshackle farm-worker's cottage high on a Ligurian hillside. For those with a shaky knowledge of Italian geography, Liguria is also known as the Italian Riviera: the bit along the coast on the top left bit of the 'boot'.

At the time the story begins, rural Liguria - the hilly area inland from the gaudy beach resorts along the Mediterranean coast - was in difficulty. Due to the difficult terrain and poor soil, local agriculture is based on olives and particularly the production of olive oil. Since this was before the health-enhancing properties of the 'Mediterranean diet' were well-known, the local farmers were reduced to scrabbling a living in any way they could and their beloved, ancient olive groves were largely neglected.

Times have changed, and the story of Extra Virgin is, to some extent, the story of how poor olive farmers have become well-off olive farmers thanks largely to changes in the eating habits of Western Europeans.

The story is mainly, however, about how two young English women who grew up in a city made a second home for themselves in the hills of Liguria and the characters, pleasures and difficulties they encountered.

It is clear that Ms Hawes has a deep affection for the countryside and the people. This does not mean she is reluctant to point out their failings and foibles. On the contrary, each of the characters who has played some part in her life is very human, but sharp observation never slips into criticism, humorous description never becomes mockery.

Ms Hawes may not like everyone she has dealt with over the years. She does respect them. Most of all, she has obviously made an effort to understand them.

If you're not a foodie (or a olive farmer) it's likely you'll learn an interesting fact or two about olives while reading Extra Virgin. You'll also learn something about the Italian philosophy of food and drink and - most importantly - the Italian theory of digestion.

If you have any sort of a sense of humour, you will certainly laugh.

Highly recommended.

A hilarous and magical read5
Annie Hawes tells the story of how she and her sister came to live in Italy and how they learned to live with and understand the olive growing locals, their families and their traditions. They soon find out the these somewhat cynical people, who are baffled and amazed by how two females will cope on their own, will become very special to them and change their lives forever. This book is heart warming, emotional and best of all hilariously funny. The stories of how the locals take to their new neighbours and their strange ways had me in fits of laughter. If you like a book that makes you laugh,lets you see a very different side to life and gets you thinking then this is the one for you. Wonderful.