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review 2013-10-04 03:47
All Creatures Great and Small – James Herriot, Christopher Timothy
All Creatures Great and Small - James Herriot,Christopher Timothy

James Herriot's books are, for me, the ultimate in comfort books. Which is odd, it occurred to me while listening to this audiobook; there's blood and gore and uterine explorations and knackerings and death and cruelty… There is casual mention of deeds and practices which would turn PETA's collective hair white. But I've been reading these books since I was about ten. (Which, considering the language, is surprising. Them Yorkshire farmers were salty, mind.) And then there was the wonderful tv series.

That last is what made the audiobook ideal: the reader is Christopher Timothy, who played James in the series (alongside my beloved Peter Davison as Tristan). I think he's one of those I'll follow anywhere, listen to anything he reads. He's perfect. Not just because I know him so well in the role already – he is a warm, funny, compassionate reader, wonderful at the accents and natural in his delivery.

Just like Alf Wight, better known as James Herriot. The things I mentioned before – well, they were simply a part of life on a Yorkshire farm, in a Yorkshire veterinary practice in the first half of the 20th century. It was as it was, there were no better treatments than some of the medieval remedies used, and for the most part animals were well kept because they were vital to the livelihood of their owners. There is a surprising lack of sentiment overall, whether the animal in question is a pig or a puppy, a horse or a heifer.

Which isn't to say the stories are strictly cool and clinical – not by a long mark. Tricki Woo is the perfect embodiment of the series as a whole. The pampered Pekingese "son" of a rich widow, he is a good-natured little furball whose ailments tend to stem mainly from that pampering. And when he goes flop-bott or shows other symptoms which alarm his Mrs. Pumphrey, "Uncle Herriot" is summoned on to the scene at once. The reward for James's promptitude is baskets from London at Christmas (I can't even fathom how expensive that would be, sent all the way to the Yorkshire Dales in the 1930's) along with other periodic delicacies – so James, naturally, has a mercenary fondness for the Peke. But he is also genuinely fond of the dog for his own self, as a personality, and of Mrs. Pumphrey as well. And balancing it all out like a splash of lemon juice is Mrs. Pumphrey's chauffeur, responsible for the spasmodic bouts of exercise she penitently orders, along with the role of body servant to the dog, and he loathes Tricki with a deep and burning passion. (And when the pig Nugent comes along, there is much hilarity.)

So, yes, there is some cringing as we visit the knacker's yard, or when some archaic remedy is brought out. But it merely acts in the same lemon juice fashion on the warmth found in the daily interactions with the farmers and peers and kids with their goldfish, the dogs and cats and horses and pigs and cows and sheep, the slowly disappearing way of life of the Dales farmers. The madness that is the Farnon brothers; the surely-hopeless love James has for a client's daughter – eccentric as it all can be, it still rings true, and that's the key. The book is, to co-opt what they might say about a particularly nice cob, as sound as a bell.

So, whether it should be a comfort book or not, it got me through a particularly bad night recently. The very definition of a comfort book. I love these stories.

Source: agoldoffish.wordpress.com/2013/09/15/all-creatures-great-and-small-james-herriot-christopher-timothy
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review 2013-03-30 00:00
Dark World
Dark World: Ghost Stories - Christopher Fowler,R.B. Russell,Mark Valentine,Steve Rasnic Tem,Reggie Oliver,Rhys Hughes,Rosalie Parker,John Gaskin,Corinna Underwood,Anna Taborska,Jayaprakash Satyamurthy,Timothy Parker Russell,Jason A. Wyckoff,Mark J. Saxton,Stephen Holman Decent but not outstanding book of hauntings. Beekended by two beautiful stories, the best in the book, by Christopher Fowler and Steve Rasnic Tem.
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review 2009-11-01 00:00
All Creatures Great and Small
All Creatures Great and Small - James Herriot,Christopher Timothy My family and I are working our way through this excellent series of audio books. I read them way back when, as the author was writing them, and while I completely enjoyed them, I missed a lot because I had no idea what the Yorkshire farmers were saying. In this version, the reader delivers the vernacular in such a way that I have no trouble understanding, whatsoever.

Christopher Timothy, the reader, is the actor who played the role of James Herriot in the television adaptation. He really does an excellent job of reading these stories.

While there is a thread which runs through the books, each individual chapter really does stand alone, as its own little short story. This is a good choice for those times when you would like to follow an audio, but can't quite listen to it as often as you'd like. You don't really have to remember the "back story," but can just enjoy each new story as it comes along.

These books really aren't about animals at all. They are about people, their eccentricities and their delights. I highly recommend this series of books in print and in the audio version. My print collection is on my feel-good bookshelf. These books belong on every shelf. They really are that good.
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