All Creatures Great And Small
***/***** Memoir
All Creatures Great and Small
James Herriot
James
Herriot, soon after graduating as a veterinary doctor, joined the practice of
Siegfried Farmon, a village veterinarian, as his assistant in the hilly county
of Yorkshire Dales in late 1930s. These are memoirs of his initial years in
practice. Book is a delightful easy read from first page to the last. Herriot is
a born raconteur. He has a knack with words and the gift of gab. Employing apt
words and befitting phrases, he brings alive the situations in his practice as a rookie vet doctor in the English countryside; the whimsical and
lovable character of his employer; the daft and thrifty farmers who are
reluctant to accept a new vet in the village; the dissolute, inveterate slacker
Triston, brother of Siefgried; calving, farrowing, and foaling of animals as
he lay prone on the cold stones of a barn full of muck; operating on horses
and being kicked in the face; treating minor ailments of fanciful pet dogs
of rich dowagers and being crowned Uncle Herriot of the dog; hard-headed
yet empathetic farmers and their reticent, shy wives who surreptitiously leave
loaves of bread or lumps of butter in his car when he visits their farms; the
penny-pinching, cynical farmers who will not pay their bills for years and the
generous, gregarious farmers who unfailingly invite him for dinner and drinks
during his visits as they gradually accept him in their community; his
courtship with his future wife who he meets first when he is called to their
farm to treat their horse with a broken leg; the baffling illnesses in the
animals and the matching ingenious remedies; a vastly rich farmer allegedly
cold-hearted who looks after his two old horses even when they have not worked
a day for last fifteen years and provides them with all comforts that he has
denied to himself; and many more such fascinating tales. Cursorily, throughout
the book, Herriot describes the natural beauty of Yorkshire hills in an
unostentatious simple prose. Book informs the reader of the intricacies and
peculiar problems of the rural veterinary practice and entertains throughout
its length. A good book to spend a cold, foggy, winter-Sunday, tucked beneath a
warm quilt, and a flask of coffee within arms’ reach.
Comments
Post a Comment