Helpful Score: 2
Reminiscent of a less-ditzy version of Lisa Douglas in Hooterville. This is the book that introduced the public to the characers Ma and Pa Kettle, who later became the subject of several films, and came to represent "hick" America for a generation or more.
Helpful Score: 1
A lovely book, should be read by all starry-eyed would-be homesteaders!
Helpful Score: 1
She thinks that chickens are dumb and has a chapter about how she hates baby chicks. Bitter old coot! I have chickens and although they are not rocket scientists they are not dumb. I thought this book would be warm and inspiring like "Little Heathens," but it is not. Grouchy author!
Helpful Score: 1
Awesome, authentic, entertaining. I loved it and won't trade my tattered copy away!
Helpful Score: 1
I used to think this was one of the funniest books I ever read. On rereading it, I found it rather racist toward native Americans. The descriptions about the neighbors is hilarious - the basis of the Ma and Pa Kettle series.
I am very conservative where language is concerned. Would have been a good story had it not been for the profanity.
LW
LW
Was very disappointed in this book. Had not expected the profanity. It was humorous in parts, but mostly it just seemed to be a lot of complaining and bitterness. Will not be keeping this book.
The Egg and I is a mostly autobiographical account about Betty MacDonald's time on a chicken farm in the late 1920s in Washington state. Filled with humor, there's plenty of odd characters, hardships to over come, new foods to be explored, and eggs to be gathered, cleaned, and packaged for sale.
The story starts off with a brief, but laughter-inducing, account of Betty's school years leading up to her whirlwind romance with Bob, their marriage, and then moving to the Pacific Northwest in search of heaven a chicken farm of their own! Betty isn't your typical heroine with perfect hair and stylish figure. Nope, she's like all the rest of us. She was considered rather too tall for the times, being 5 ft 9 in. I like that she had a belly and rough hands and messy hair. In many ways she's a very practical person, but she's still a city girl moving to the country, so there's plenty for her to learn.
There is one big negative to this book, which was typical of the time period (this book was originally published in 1945): racist remarks towards Native Americans. At the time, such remarks were common and considered accurate. Thankfully, our society as a whole has grown and such remarks today would not sit well with me at all. In truth, even in a historical perspective, these remarks make me a bit angry. However, I am glad that the publisher decided to keep the book as it was originally written instead of washing out these remarks, maintaining the historical accuracy of views at that time, and showing that people of every ethnicity, including the author, are flawed.
OK, so now that that is out of the way, there's plenty I enjoyed about this book. First, this story spoke to me in many ways. My husband and I some years ago left city life for rural living and had a little farm. We had to go through many of the same learning curves as Betty starting a fire every day in winter to heat the house, irrigation, gardening, chickens, plowing with equines, stray dogs getting into our property, etc. While we have indoor plumbing, it's not too hard to picture Betty briskly walking out to the outhouse on a crisp autumn morning.
The Pacific Northwest, and several places named in this book, hold a special place in my heart. Having family in Port Angeles and Seattle, we have visited the area many times. So it was a real treat to see these places through Betty's eyes in the late 1920s when things were really rugged. She talks of all the edible local foods including the Dungeness crabs and the geoduck clams. Having a chicken farm, they were never short of eggs, so she learned to add an extra egg or two to any recipe that called for eggs, and to a few recipes that did not.
Ma and Pa Kettle feature prominently in the story, being some of the closest neighbors to the isolated chicken farm. There's also the Hicks, who are eccentric in other ways. I think anyone who moves to the country will find a bevvy of interesting characters in the area and Betty doesn't skimp on telling how odd her neighbors are. Also, Betty told amusing tales about the animals on the farm, her husband Bob, and inanimate objects, like the wood-burning kitchen stove. She doesn't leave herself out of this well-meaning, laughter-inducing critique either. There's plenty of chuckles to go around.
It being a chicken farm, we have to talk about the chickens. Since Bob was often working away from the farm during the day, Betty was the main care-taker of all the beasties. I love her descriptions of all the loving labor she, and sometimes Bob, put into caring for these birds. There's the daily cleaning of their houses, maintaining the fences around their yards, putting together their feed, tending to the chicks (which far too easily succumb to death), gathering the eggs, and regularly culling the flock. She very accurately describes how with any other beast, such care would be returned with affection. Not so with the chicken! So true, and I say that from a place of love for chickens.
While Betty often jokes, she also usually tells it like it is. I hope others enjoy this classic as much as I do.
I received a free copy of this book via The Audiobookworm.
The Narration: Heather Henderson did a great job with this book. I love how she carries the humor, telling it with a sense of irony where needed. She has a unique voice for each character and her male voices are quite believable.
The story starts off with a brief, but laughter-inducing, account of Betty's school years leading up to her whirlwind romance with Bob, their marriage, and then moving to the Pacific Northwest in search of heaven a chicken farm of their own! Betty isn't your typical heroine with perfect hair and stylish figure. Nope, she's like all the rest of us. She was considered rather too tall for the times, being 5 ft 9 in. I like that she had a belly and rough hands and messy hair. In many ways she's a very practical person, but she's still a city girl moving to the country, so there's plenty for her to learn.
There is one big negative to this book, which was typical of the time period (this book was originally published in 1945): racist remarks towards Native Americans. At the time, such remarks were common and considered accurate. Thankfully, our society as a whole has grown and such remarks today would not sit well with me at all. In truth, even in a historical perspective, these remarks make me a bit angry. However, I am glad that the publisher decided to keep the book as it was originally written instead of washing out these remarks, maintaining the historical accuracy of views at that time, and showing that people of every ethnicity, including the author, are flawed.
OK, so now that that is out of the way, there's plenty I enjoyed about this book. First, this story spoke to me in many ways. My husband and I some years ago left city life for rural living and had a little farm. We had to go through many of the same learning curves as Betty starting a fire every day in winter to heat the house, irrigation, gardening, chickens, plowing with equines, stray dogs getting into our property, etc. While we have indoor plumbing, it's not too hard to picture Betty briskly walking out to the outhouse on a crisp autumn morning.
The Pacific Northwest, and several places named in this book, hold a special place in my heart. Having family in Port Angeles and Seattle, we have visited the area many times. So it was a real treat to see these places through Betty's eyes in the late 1920s when things were really rugged. She talks of all the edible local foods including the Dungeness crabs and the geoduck clams. Having a chicken farm, they were never short of eggs, so she learned to add an extra egg or two to any recipe that called for eggs, and to a few recipes that did not.
Ma and Pa Kettle feature prominently in the story, being some of the closest neighbors to the isolated chicken farm. There's also the Hicks, who are eccentric in other ways. I think anyone who moves to the country will find a bevvy of interesting characters in the area and Betty doesn't skimp on telling how odd her neighbors are. Also, Betty told amusing tales about the animals on the farm, her husband Bob, and inanimate objects, like the wood-burning kitchen stove. She doesn't leave herself out of this well-meaning, laughter-inducing critique either. There's plenty of chuckles to go around.
It being a chicken farm, we have to talk about the chickens. Since Bob was often working away from the farm during the day, Betty was the main care-taker of all the beasties. I love her descriptions of all the loving labor she, and sometimes Bob, put into caring for these birds. There's the daily cleaning of their houses, maintaining the fences around their yards, putting together their feed, tending to the chicks (which far too easily succumb to death), gathering the eggs, and regularly culling the flock. She very accurately describes how with any other beast, such care would be returned with affection. Not so with the chicken! So true, and I say that from a place of love for chickens.
While Betty often jokes, she also usually tells it like it is. I hope others enjoy this classic as much as I do.
I received a free copy of this book via The Audiobookworm.
The Narration: Heather Henderson did a great job with this book. I love how she carries the humor, telling it with a sense of irony where needed. She has a unique voice for each character and her male voices are quite believable.
This book was also the basis for the popular movies about Ma and Pa Kettle, and I believe they also did a movie from the book itself. It is an entertaining book, and the descriptions are such that you feel you are right there in the middle of the tribulations.
Hilariously wry humor! An also-ran teen marries a much older man, is hornswoggled, hog-tied, and bamboozled into following him into the chicken ranch business. Where? Why in western Washington logging country; that's where! What ensues is a witty, heartwarming glimpse into the daily drudgery of farm life amid the local populace: the Kettles, the Hicks, loggers, Indians, oops, Native Americans, moonshiners, and dipsomaniacs. You can almost smell the countryside.
This was interesting and fun to read. It was about a young woman who helped her husband run a chicken ranch on the west coast in a very rural area.
This is an excellent, old book. I've heard my pop talk about it all my life and I finally read it 50 years later. She is an excellent writer and since I live in Washington I know the area she's talking about, how it used to be. Highly recommended, especially if you enjoy life on the old farm.