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In 2005, Di
Slaney abandoned her urban existence to become the custodian of an ancient
farmhouse in Nottinghamshire, populating it with – at the last count – 150
animals, most of them rescued. Reward
for Winter tells that story on three levels: the earthy triumphs
and tribulations of a novice smallholder; the history of Bilsthorpe from Viking
settlement through Civil War to coal mining in the 1920s; and the quirky and
affecting biography of one of the farm’s chickens.
The land, the generations who have tended it and Di’s animals are given voice,
from the humorous ‘How to knit a sheep’ to the intimate, illuminating cycle
focusing on a single chicken – learn, among other fascinating details, what
dictates the colour of your breakfast egg. Reward
for Winter also explores Bilsthorpe’s hidden histories: lost
landmarks Ingar’s Holt and Labour-in-Vain; an Elizabethan witch trial; a
concealed Cavalier king and seventeenth-century adultery. This book stands as
both a fascinating work of non-fiction and an elegant and accomplished volume
of poems, offering the reader an escape hatch to the country and a lungful of
bracing air.
In 2005, Di
Slaney abandoned her urban existence to become the custodian of an ancient
farmhouse in Nottinghamshire, populating it with – at the last count – 150
animals, most of them rescued. Reward...
In 2005, Di
Slaney abandoned her urban existence to become the custodian of an ancient
farmhouse in Nottinghamshire, populating it with – at the last count – 150
animals, most of them rescued. Reward
for Winter tells that story on three levels: the earthy triumphs
and tribulations of a novice smallholder; the history of Bilsthorpe from Viking
settlement through Civil War to coal mining in the 1920s; and the quirky and
affecting biography of one of the farm’s chickens.
The land, the generations who have tended it and Di’s animals are given voice,
from the humorous ‘How to knit a sheep’ to the intimate, illuminating cycle
focusing on a single chicken – learn, among other fascinating details, what
dictates the colour of your breakfast egg. Reward
for Winter also explores Bilsthorpe’s hidden histories: lost
landmarks Ingar’s Holt and Labour-in-Vain; an Elizabethan witch trial; a
concealed Cavalier king and seventeenth-century adultery. This book stands as
both a fascinating work of non-fiction and an elegant and accomplished volume
of poems, offering the reader an escape hatch to the country and a lungful of
bracing air.
Marketing Plan
"Those who admire Di Slaney’s sophisticated and dextrous poems will be
deeply grateful for this first full collection. Swinging to the rhythms
of farm life, the book takes in a wide range of tones, from the humour
of ‘How to knit a sheep’ to the transcendent lyricism of the
collection’s title poem ... [it also] includes a highly original
sequence about chickens and egg-laying. Beautifully-crafted and very
moving." -Jonathan Edwards, poet
"Those who admire Di Slaney’s sophisticated and dextrous poems will be deeply grateful for this first full collection. Swinging to the rhythms of farm life, the book takes in a wide range of tones...
"Those who admire Di Slaney’s sophisticated and dextrous poems will be
deeply grateful for this first full collection. Swinging to the rhythms
of farm life, the book takes in a wide range of tones, from the humour
of ‘How to knit a sheep’ to the transcendent lyricism of the
collection’s title poem ... [it also] includes a highly original
sequence about chickens and egg-laying. Beautifully-crafted and very
moving." -Jonathan Edwards, poet