You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Best Person Rural: Essays of a Sometime Farmer » (New Edition)

Book cover image of Best Person Rural: Essays of a Sometime Farmer by Noel Perrin

Authors: Noel Perrin, Terry Osborne (Foreword by), Terry Osborne
ISBN-13: 9781567923070, ISBN-10: 1567923070
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Godine, David R. Publishers, Inc.
Date Published: April 2006
Edition: New Edition

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Noel Perrin

Book Synopsis

In 1963, Noel Perrin, a 35-year-old professor of English at Dartmouth College, bought an 85-acre farm in Thetford Center, Vermont. For the next forty years he spent half his time teaching, half writing, and half farming. "That this adds up to three halves I am all too aware," he said, sounding a characteristic, self-deprecating note of bittersweet amusement at the chalk on his coat, the sweat on his brow, and the mud (and worse) on his boots.

"I love this farm," he wrote shortly before his death in 2004, "every acre of it. The maples, the apple trees, the cattle, the wild turkeys. I love the brick farmhouse, which I believe to be about 190 years old ... and the two barns. I love the view from the kitchen window ... and the grander view to be had if you climb Bill Hill, the farm's in-house mini-mountain. The thing that delights me most, though, is that the farm really is a farm. It produces a little food every year, and most years a little fuel as well." It also produced four volumes of essays, beginning with the best-selling First Person Rural (1978). Some of Perrin's pieces are practical (how to build a stone wall), others philosophical (why to build a stone wall). One pretends to be about amateur sugar making, but it is really a metaphor for reality and illusion. Another pretends to be about the country as a retreat, but is really about the country as a place to meet the world head-on. One is a dangerous character sketch of a sow—dangerous, because as Roy Blount said after reading it, "It almost made me decide to go ahead and get pigs."

In short, these essays are as good as the literature of farming gets. Best Person Rural is a harvest feast, bringing together twenty ofPerrin's best-loved pieces and five previously uncollected items, including his moving "Farewell to a Thetford Farm."

"Perrin lets the language break down into little fragments, hard stones left by a receding glacier. It isn't easy to talk about the soul, and New Englanders have as hard a time as anyone. Perrin's writing mirrors that difficulty, that ingrained reticence." -Alex Hanson, Valley News

Table of Contents

Subjects