Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Seasons of My Life

Rate this book
The autobiography of Hannah Hauxwell, who lived alone in a remote Yorkshire farmhouse, with neither water nor electricity. She first told her story on Yorkshire Television's award-winning "Too Long a Winter" and its sequel "A Winter Too Many".

203 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1993

268 people are currently reading
484 people want to read

About the author

Hannah Hauxwell

19 books12 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
215 (40%)
4 stars
189 (35%)
3 stars
108 (20%)
2 stars
15 (2%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 38 reviews
Profile Image for Anna.
584 reviews8 followers
February 28, 2020
A beautiful easy to read story of a world no longer with us. Some poignant moments. Ms Hauxwell clearly loved dogs and all animals that makes her very special to me.
Profile Image for Mark.
1,177 reviews166 followers
February 21, 2022
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.
Profile Image for Christina.
174 reviews6 followers
May 30, 2024
This book claimed to be about Hannah Hauxwell's solitary dale life, but that was honestly a pretty small part of it. It was mostly about the process of making a documentary about her. It's not that it was uninteresting per se, but I wanted more about Hannah and less about the fan mail she got after the documentary, which seemed a little self-congratulatory on the part of the filmmaker (who also co-wrote this book).
Profile Image for Stan.
38 reviews6 followers
January 16, 2013
A simple story , its a small ( big ) part of not so ancient history , reminds me of neighbours here in Ireland , no running water cooked on fire. Not so long ago.

So I liked it
Profile Image for Aimee.
53 reviews2 followers
March 12, 2021
An absolutely beautiful true story that I thoroughly enjoyed reading. Hannah Hauxwell is an inspirational woman and shows the true spirit of endurance, perseverance and humility. This was an enchanting literary adventure, wonderfully written, totally uplifting and incredibly interesting. I’ve been recommending it to everyone.
Profile Image for Tim Palfreman.
81 reviews
November 8, 2024
This book has been sitting on one of my bookshelves, unread, for over 20 years. In the last 3 years I’ve spent a lot of time on the Pennine Way, and passed through Hannah’s Meadow at least half a dozen times. So I eventually decided it was time to read it.

It’s a beautiful book. It outlines the life of Hannah Hauxwell in the remote valley of Baldersdale, now in County Durham, near Teesdale. She lived a hard life without electricity or running water, in poverty, running a small farm. Then she became famous from a TV documentary called Too Long a Winter. Twenty years later another documentary called A Winter Too Many, catches up with her, still on her farm. Both are beautiful films, well worth watching on YouTube. Part of the joy of these films is hearing the musical lilt of Hannah’s voice, which one can then hear in her words in the book.

Despite her hard life, and an awareness of how things could have been different, Hannah presents a serene and philosophical attitude of contentment with her lot. The book is a joy, both for its depiction of Hannah, and for its description of a way of rural life which disappeared 60 years ago.
346 reviews
February 12, 2021
Amazing - I cried when I saw the two videos in 1999 and cried again when I finished this. In the 70's Barry Cocroft made two highly acclaimed features, one about several families living in the remote Yorkshire Dales and the other just about Hannah who by that time was famous beyond belief, but still wedded to her solitary life at Low Birk farm, living without the amenities we all take for granted. The book fills in some of the blank spots in the videos and repeats other parts and Cocroft has added a narrative to Hannah's strong voice to fill in the blanks. In spite of accolades, many gifts and a group of supporters trying ineffectively to move Hannah to safer surroundings she remained at her farm with her beloved animals and the lovely country -- until she finally made the decision to move - that's where my tears came in. I actually recommend the videos as first choice, but the book may be easier to get a hold of.
Profile Image for Margaret.
1,133 reviews
June 22, 2024
I like memoirs about people who live out in the country, on farms or in the wilderness. That’s what I thought this was. It is actually dialogue taken from a documentary from the 1970s about a woman who lived on a farm in the Yorkshire Dales by herself without electricity or running water. A film crew was sent out and spent quite a lot of time interviewing her, and this book is written from those interviews. She became quite famous in Great Britain at the time, and I think that the book was put together for her many fans to read. Mostly she talks about people that lived nearby when she was growing up that all moved away eventually or died.
Profile Image for Plum-crazy.
2,467 reviews42 followers
October 16, 2017
I remember back in the early 1970's seeing this on TV & recall, being really taken with this old woman. Well, I say old woman but in truth at the time Hannah was 46 - how strange to think she was quite a bit younger than I am now !!

Hannah is certainly someone you don't forget & it was lovely to re-visit her life in this lovely little book - it's inspiring, heart-warming & heart-breaking...I'm not ashamed to say I had a lump in my throat & a tear in my eye as she talked of her mother's death.

A remarkable woman indeed.
Profile Image for Summreen.
62 reviews1 follower
March 20, 2021
I loved reading Hannahs story, inspirational, the hardships she endured. I watched the programs made of her in the 70's afterwards. The bond she had with her animals was lovely and the simple life she was emotionally tied to but struggled to cope with physically especially in the winters, made me feel for her for sure. The beauty of the Dales verse the isolation, and lack of utilities in older years.
2 reviews
November 30, 2025
A glimpse into a lost world

They don't make them like this any more. Hannah reminds me of my grandma who raised 13 children in rural Indiana during the Depression-- grew and preserved all their food , made their clothes, kept a cow, baked their bread, lived to 94 years of age. They don't make them that way any more. Hannah's story is inspiring, sad, hopeful, tragic, but in the end, human. It reminds us of what being human is about.
Profile Image for Patti Gray Dunkin.
55 reviews5 followers
August 14, 2018
Very satisfying book

I came across documentaries of Hannah Hauxwelll on the internet and was intrigued. This book is her memoir and editorial notes for background of her solitary and lonely and often brutal life living as the sole proprietor of her family farm in an isolated area of the Yorkshire dales. I loved Hannah's innocent and articulate perceptions of her life.


Profile Image for sarah carter.
2 reviews
November 20, 2025
A remarkable book

A wonderful book not just about an amazing lady, but of a way of life that is rarely seen today. It happened in recent times, but is of an old way of life. It is about a landscape and its animals and its people, that should always be remembered and preserved for future generations.
Profile Image for Mary.
254 reviews4 followers
March 2, 2018
Had read this many years ago but since Hannah's recent death decided to read it again and delighted to say it is just as good second time round. A delightful book telling the story, in her own words, of het own life in the Yorkshire Dales.
57 reviews3 followers
December 26, 2023
I can't imagine

Being a spoiled city dweller that I am, I can't imagine the hardships that Hannah endured. Yet, that was the life she loved and I'm sure she was very sad when she left.
Profile Image for Lauren.
14 reviews2 followers
August 13, 2025
Hannah Hauxwell's life is certainly worth reading about. It's a rare look into a life that most of us could never even begin to imagine! My main issue was just the formatting of the book. It feels a bit disjointed.
77 reviews
January 5, 2017
What a great book, I remember watching this series on television many many years ago. She is a remarkable women leave out in the back of beyond on her own.
This is a must read.
Profile Image for Helen.
122 reviews
December 10, 2017
absolutely amazing book. to think she survived with no electricity and running water for so long. such an inspiration
303 reviews1 follower
July 12, 2018
I really enjoyed this book and can only imagine the impact this had at the time the tv documentary was released. In our modern age it is hard to understand how Hannah lived in such conditions.
Profile Image for Lewis Baker.
27 reviews13 followers
January 12, 2019
A brilliant autobiography but the co-author's writing is questionable
135 reviews5 followers
September 23, 2019
Interesting iography of a very individual lady with a determined heart but soft gentle spirit
176 reviews1 follower
January 1, 2021
I remember the series that was on television so it was interesting to read this book.
Profile Image for Marlies.
442 reviews
December 1, 2021
I found this hard to read: I'm very happy that things have turned around for Ms. Hauxwell, but she had such a hard life.
Profile Image for Mark waite.
212 reviews
February 6, 2022
A fantastic read . The true story of an inspirational lady and a gentler forgotten way of life
Profile Image for Joanne Fuller.
24 reviews
March 17, 2023
Loved it

I had already viewed the documentary and very much wanted to read the book. I can't even imagine such a hard life. So happy Hannah had a wonderful retirement.
Profile Image for Christine Parkinson.
365 reviews3 followers
August 28, 2024
Intriguing story about Hannah Hauxwell who lived in the Yorkshire Dales alone with no electricity, heating or running water. Interested to watch the TV programme now.
165 reviews1 follower
August 23, 2025
Charming book which takes the reader back to a very different era.
Profile Image for Toni.
329 reviews18 followers
November 8, 2021
An extraordinary life

Hannah grew up in a remote area in that Yorkshire Dales. Her family all passed and she continued to live there...no running water, no heat, no electricity. She was both the farmer and the farmers wife ( her words) Her animals came first, second and third to others..even herself. Great book on a different, harder life
Profile Image for Rebecca.
632 reviews5 followers
April 13, 2024
Tried to like this book, but it kept on being boring. It is like reading someone else's family genealogy, I have very little interest in someone else's family but I have a lot more interest in my own.

The author goes on and on about all of the families she is related to and how in detail. I don't care, and the writing did not make me care.

Then she goes on and on about every little geographical spot around her locale. It should have been interesting, but it wasn't. I was unable to picture anything. The lack of drawing a picture in my mind made it flat and uninteresting to me.

So I have DNF'd this book. Did Not Finish.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 38 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.