This was another serendipity discovery from listening to a BBC books broadcast, in which one panelist selected this memoir as her choice of a good read.
It is not so much a memoir, it turns out, as a "told to" oral history by Hannah Hauxwell, who became an overnight sensation in the 1970s in Britain when her life was documented in a BBC documentary about her solitary existence on an impoverished farm in the Yorkshire Dales.
(As it turns out, we've been watching All Things Great and Small, also set in the Dales, but showing a very different environment than the one depicted in this book).
I gave this 3 stars mostly because it is not tremendously successful as a book, and in particular, it forces readers to slog through an early chapter in which Hannah describes all of her neighbors in detail, without much contextual information to make them that interesting.
Still, there was something very alluring about her story -- both her resiliency as a single woman farmer for much of her adult life, and the sadness and loneliness that accompanied her existence.
The memoir, put together by the documentary producers, show Hannah's innate kindness and sense of dignity. But it also shows how constricted her life was. The only child of sickly parents, she lost her father when she was young and had to give up any idea of further schooling to work the family farm. Her uncle came to live with her and her mother, and he was very strict with her, keeping her from forming any attachments as a young woman.
Soon, both her mother and uncle were gone, and Hannah entered middle age struggling by with one cow -- and a calf to sell each year -- in a house that had no electricity or running water and in a region that suffered through what in Britain passes for severe winters.
After the documentary, she became a minor celebrity and for the first time in her life, visited larger cities, eventually going to a fancy awards dinner in London, getting electricity in her house, and then, when the farm work became too much, retiring to a cottage in a nearby village.
As a glimpse of a bygone and somewhat harsh way of life, it kept my interest. As a person who persevered through many privations and shortages, Hannah earned my admiration, but also my pity for what her life could have been.