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Ever Changing, All is Life

Notes From Walnut Tree Farm by Roger Deakin is published by Hamish-Hamilton. A book about change and sameness in country life, it is filled with observations of the wild and not so wild.

Roger Deakin died in 2006, leaving behind 45 exercise books of diaries covering his last six years of life. Terence Blacker and Alison Hastie, two close friends, skilfully edited them into one book. Rather than going by real time, they arranged his writings into the four seasons starting naturally with spring to bring it to conclusion in winter. They contrived thereby an admirable composition as natural as the flow of the seasons.

Roger Deakin’s observation of nature around him and his farm is minute, but never boring. With keen eyes and adroit hearing, he brings to life animals and their sounds, plants, trees, wind, and seasons. His observations lead him off into philosophical thoughts, or into humour, or through one into the other. But even with thoughts drifting, he never becomes either disjointed or chaotic in the flow of his ruminations.

If you like the countryside and are not living there, this book makes you hear and smell wet grass, hay, and fallen leaves. Deakin’s many observations about spiders, frogs, trees, and squirrels will remind you of times spent outdoors. It is not a wild book about the wilderness, but an orderly book about orderly country life with its joys and its sorrows, its complaints and its rewards.

I am no friend of posthumously published books. They usually seem like disjointed limbs being put together the wrong way; or they feel like the dustbin has been emptied on the desk and just been scanned. Not so here, where the book, I suspect, is more of an entity than the original diaries ever were.

When I had finished, I felt I had rushed through the book, though I had taken my time to read it. It is a book that lends itself to slow reading with long thoughts in between sentences or paragraphs. Ideally, I think, it should be read season by season and in season to get the feel for its ebb and flow. I will put it aside now, and take it up again in spring.

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Comments (11)
#1 by  Inna Tysoe, Nov 18, 2008
That was a really well done review. At certain points, there was almost a rhythm to it.

Best,

Inna
#2 by  Lucas Dié, Nov 18, 2008
Thank you Inna. I tried to transfer a bit of this ebb and flow of the book into this scribble, because it's so great.
#3 by  sue mcverry, Nov 18, 2008
You've sold that one to me. I'm off to the library to put in a request. Thanks, I'm always on the lookout for new books to read.
#4 by  Lucas Dié, Nov 18, 2008
I'm glad I did :)

But it's a ime consumer, it makes your thoughts drift :)
#5 by  Sotiris, Nov 18, 2008
nice article :)
#6 by  Lucas Dié, Nov 18, 2008
Thank you :)
#7 by  R J Grant, Nov 18, 2008
I have often found that a second reading is more enjoyable than the first.

Grant
#8 by  Lucas Dié, Nov 18, 2008
That is true also, if it is not one from the bottom shelf :)
#9 by  joystick7, Nov 18, 2008
Nice article!
#10 by  Lucas Dié, Nov 18, 2008
Thanks heaps :)
#11 by  Lucas Dié, Dec 12, 2008
Bookmark this page to get all my book reviews (updated regularly):

http://ucash.in/my_links/user/britameric/search/book_review
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