Monday, February 24, 2025

The Shepherd's Life by James Rebanks


This memoir starts with the author's early life and his distain for the educational system. At age twelve the school sorts the children between the grammar or comprehensive groups, those moving into grammar deemed intelligent enough for higher education and eventually professional careers. Those in comprehensive are destined for labor jobs such as bricklayers, hairdressers, farmers.  The teacher tries to inspire the children to reach for more while the boys carry on and ignore her, dismiss her preaching because they are content to work on their family farm.  They fight and vandalize and never read. 

But James Rebanks is different and unwittingly educates himself by picking up books at home from his mother's library and then craving more.  Hemingway, Camus, Salinger and Orwell.  This he does not share with his friends.  

One day in a pub an old Korean war veteran sees Rebanks grab a book off the wall shelf and place it in his jacket.  He didn't want his friends to see but the veteran starts fussing about how he couldn't identify the plane on the book cover. The author does indeed identify it and good deal more, leaving the old man smiling and his friends gobsmacked. Eventually he ends up with an Oxford education in addition to invaluable educational experience he gains from years working with his grandfather and father.  

The focus of the book is mainly that of shepherding, raising the sheep and the workings of the farm in Cumbria.  The book appealed to be because I am the nerdy sort who likes reading about farm life and how they sustain a living with hard work and love of their environment. Also, the setting is Cumbria, an area I've done much research as my gg grandparents and their ancestors lived there until settling in the Philadelphia area.

I learned many things in this book such as much of the mountainous areas of the land in the Lake District were given to the National Trust by wealthy benefactors like Beatrix Potter.   Mrs. Beatrix (Potter) Heelis had a farm called Hill Top and made sure over 4,000 acres and fifteen farms were protected by bequeathing them in her will.  To read about the society click HERE.

This land was given to protect the landscape and its unique way of life, because it was deemed to be in the public interest.  I did not know that before I read this book. (Page 22)

It was interesting to me to read about Herdwick sheep. They're arguably the toughest mountain sheep in Britain, almost indestructible according to the author. Through the worst weather, be it snow, rain, hail or sleet they can live on less than any other sheep in these conditions. Scientific research show Herdwicks are genetically special. They have in them a primitive genome, possibly from Viking stock as their British sheep relatives are from Sweden, Finland and Iceland.

The fell farming way, grazing the sheep in the mountains during certain months, is an ancient way which has disappeared almost everywhere else. The sheep go there on common land with their neighbors stock and get sorted when they are brought down come winter.  Everyone works together.

I will be starting another book by this author titled Pastoral Song soon.

Families like ours roll on beside each other, through the ages. with bonds enduring.  Individuals live and die, but the farms, the flocks and the old families go on. P 65

#memoir #nonfiction #England

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Reading, watching and library loot

This has been a good week for book and movie arrivals here.  

Currently Reading / Testament of Youth by Vera Brittain (buddy read with JoAnn)





Just finished The Shepherd's Life by James Rebanks - review here  and plan to read Pastoral Song soon.  


Also in bookish updates, The Classics Club. announced their Spin so I made my list of 20 possibilities.  It's my first time participating and it was fun making my list. My Spin List is HERE and I see (as of Sunday) the book I'll be reading is Brideshead Revisted by Evelyn Waugh.


Book Accessories / When I am not reading on a Kindle I can read anywhere but physical books require sufficient light in the evenings.  Recently I broke out my pretty book light and it's helping me get more book time late.

The horizontal position of this light works better than an older one I had with a vertical drop.  It also provides more light across both page surfaces.


Watching

Part of my library loot this week was Force of Nature and Severance.  In the mailbox was Cosmos.  Force of Nature followed the Jane Harper book of the same name, the second one in the Aaron Falk series. Set in Australia and I am looking forward to the next one.




Severance was completely weird and in the beginning we almost stopped watching.  But wow, after about 15 minutes or so things start coming together and we were hooked.  Such cliff hangers. Looking forward to season 2 when the library can order it...I am probably looking at waiting a year so please, no spoilers!

Cosmos was an independent film made on a shoe string budget about amateur astronomers.  The newest member of a team makes a discovery using radio signals from an unexpected origin.  This is set in England.

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Classic Club Spin

Since joining the Classics Club I have managed to read two from my list, so that's going well.  Today I will be participating in my first Classic Club Spin.  You may read about that on their website HERE.

Here's my book list for the Classics Club spin 

  1. A Room with a View by E.M. Forester
  2. Agnes Grey by Ann Bronte
  3. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
  4. Bridehead Revisited - Evelyn Waugh
  5. Daisy Miller by Henry James
  6. Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
  7. Goodnight, Mr. Tom by Michelle Magorian
  8. Hotel Du Lac by Anita Brookner
  9. It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
  10. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
  11. Scapegoat by Daphne Du Maurier
  12. Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
  13. Tess of the D'urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
  14. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
  15. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
  16. The Postman by David Brin
  17. The Quiet American by Graham Greene
  18. The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell
  19. The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico
  20. To Sir with Love by E.R. Braithwaite
When the spin number is announced on Sunday I will read that book before April 11, 2025.  It's my first time with this spin event so I'm excited!


Sharing with:

Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

The Story of a Heart by Dr. Rachel Clarke

 Two families, one heart and the medical miracle that saved a child’s life


A girl from Devon and a boy from Cheshire became intertwined by the most tragic circumstances. In 2017 nine-year old Keira Ball was in a car accident which left her brain dead. For several months prior to that accident nine-year old Max Johnson's heart was slowly failing him.  He'd contracted a virus which weaked his heart causing acute cardiomyopothy.

This book is a page turner and takes you on the journey of Keira and Max's lives when they were both happy and healthy children. The experiences of both sets of parents, before the accident and afterwards, will leave you with such empathy for both familes. I did shed a tear or two while reading.

I found this a fascinating book, learned so much such as how ventilators were invented, the beginnings of the first I.C.U. and so much more.  It was explained in laymans terms so I was never lost, it was never a dry narrative.  The coordination between hospitals, doctors and those working with matching the urgent needs for organ donation  is amazing.  I never knew how very detailed this process was.

"Grief, as nurses know better than anyone, is the form love takes when someone dies.  Perhaps grief hurts as much as it ought to - as much and as fiercely as the person who has died was loved."

Here is part of the letter Max's family gave to the anonymous donor family:

"To the donor family, We are writing to you as you hold a very special place in our hearts.  Our son, Max, is 9 and he had a heart transplant.  He was very poorly and a heart transplant was his only chance of coming home and starting a new life.

We are so very sorry that you lost your loved one, but we would like to thank you for the incredibly kind, courageous decison that allowed organs to be donated. We do not know the circumstances, but we can only imagine what a dreadful, harrowing time you have been through and are doubtless still going through, with the loss.

Even in your grief, you have made a selfless decision to help others and we are indescribably  grateful to you....."

Dr. Rachel Clarke is a palliative care doctor and the author of many books. She lives in Oxfordshire with her husband and children.


This book are shared with:

Shelleyrae at Book'd Out for the 2025 Nonfiction Reader Challenge. Category: Health

Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday

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Sunday, February 9, 2025

Presently reading......

My tablet basically died. It was locking up, going to black screen and I couldn't turn it off.  As the tablet and blogging are my only interaction with book sites & friends, news, etc.....I had to get a new one.  It interfered with some posts I was hoping to get done but...now I am all set.

Very irritating to have to spend the money on it as I was digging in to No Buy 2025.  Here are a couple of articles about that Here and Here

In book news....

Just finished  The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough which was a buddy read with Deb at Readerbuzz.  It's always nice to read with someone :-)

Currently reading / Testament of Youth by Vera Brittain with JoAnn. Also started The Story of a Heart by Dr. Rachel Clarke, a page turner in nonfiction. Fascinating so far.



Sharing a couple of "new" books for Mailbox Monday (hosted by Vicki).  I have The Shepherd's Life by James Rebanks from the library and  I purchased White Oleander by Janet Fitch for $2 from their sale shelves.  Not sure when I will get started on the Rebanks book as I am finishing up the nonfiction right now.


Other posts this week besides the Thorn Birds review was about Loki's birthday/ gotcha day


That's about it.  Not a crazy exciting week here but I am getting some good reading in.  I hope your week is a good one.

Sharing with:

Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Vicki for Mailbox Monday

Saturday, February 8, 2025

The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough
#ClassicsClub #BuddyRead

 The Thorn Birds was a buddy read with Deb at Readerbuzz.  This was an interesting journey through decades with the Cleary family and getting myself immersed in Australian outback conditions. 

Below is a general summary of the book but spoilers are in my Goodreads review HERE.   


This is a multi-generational saga spanning from 1915 to 1969.  The Cleary family, Paddy and Fiona, along with their seven children, are trying to make ends meet on a farm in New Zealand.  You will read about the hardships of the family and how they eventually move to Australia when Paddy's sister (Mary Carson) offers them a home on her vast property called Drogheda.

Paddy is Mary's only heir and he will eventually be assumed to inherit her estate. The sons flourish working on the sheep ranch and the women are sequestered at home doing the usual mundane work of cooking, laundry, childcare etc.  Yet another perk of being a female in that time period.

A central character to this story is Father Ralph de Bricassart, the Catholic priest who visits Mary Carson, hoping to advance his position with the church and relocate to Sydney or perhaps, one day...Rome. He becomes very involved with the Cleary family, much to Mary's dismay, but her vindictive nature will eventually turn the tables.

The descriptions of the birds, landscape and the flora are very richly described; such vivid colors and atmosphere.  The weather conditions are so well depicted you can feel it, easily imagining hot breezes, the sticky humidity and bitter cold in each season.

There is so much tragedy, sadness as well as love in this novel.  

This was a buddy read with Deb at Readerbuzz and also one of the books on my Classics Club list.  Publication date 1977.


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Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Happy Birthday, Loki - today is his Gotcha Day!

Loki's Gotcha Day!  Four years ago we adopted an underweight, flea ridden scrap of a dog they were calling Albert.

He had lived outside all his life and was just this side of feral.  The local Humane Society grabbed him up from a Bainbridge Georgia shelter because they were going to put him to sleep.  He was afraid of everything and everyone and did not attempt to engage anyone walking through the kennel trying to adopt.  

He was a challenge as he had to be housebroken, tried to bite us multiple times and had food insecurity so he'd knock over trashcans and make a huge mess. 

Fast forward and he is a relatively happy dog.  He has separation anxiety and takes Xanax when needed (such as any trip to the vet) but he is a very intelligent dog, loves us and enjoys a good life now.

Happy birthday, Loki! 

He got a new kitchen bed



He enjoyed an OraVet chew for dental health

He rolled around outside in the sun for bit. 


Happy birthday old man 🐾  Rescue dogs have brightened our lives.

A rainy Sunday

It's Sunday and the rain has been coming down since last night.  We have a mini pond out front where the water is collecting.  I expect ...