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A Place in the Country
Laura Shaine Cunningham

Riverhead Trade, 2001 - 304 pages

average customer review:based on 19 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





The funniest book ever for country house people

I fell over when she says she does her spring planting in July. So do I. With packets from the farmer's market. the animals eat mine too! This book is a witty treasure trove of such goodies -- she taught ground hogs to like mesclun mix. Give to friends who are buying second homes, and keep one in your potting shed for comic relief.


I couldn't put " A Place In The Country " down.

I found this book very habit forming and was so interesting I just had to keep reading. The tales of going to camp and her guardian Uncles were strange, but funny also. Sad at times and frustrating making her swimming pool out in the field. What a job.
Finding out that the old folks were so poor they had to sell off pieces of the property to keep their heads above all the finances assoiated with such a large estate and they didn't tell her right away.
They weren't allowed to walk where they had been since moving there as the new tentents were not as friendly and didn't want the infringments of strangers on the front of their property. Also the cows in the fields near by in the back fields were quite a surprise to picture all that.
This book was very informative. I really enjoyed reading it!...


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a place on my shelf forever.

i was surprised to read any negative reviews since i enjoyed this book so completely, not wanting it to end. then i realized its not for everyone, since it goes at a slow pace and is not a thriller or blockbuster. however, if you love books that emphasize the glories and the heartaches of every-day life, you'll love this one. i will re-read it over and over, and always treasure it.






A charming sequel to SLEEPING ARRANGEMENTS

In SLEEPING ARRANGEMENTS, author Laura Shaine Cunningham movingly remembered her life growing up in the Bronx with her single mother, Rosie, until the latter's untimely death, after which Laura's guardians were her mother's two odd-ball bachelor brothers, Len and Gabe.

A PLACE IN THE COUNTRY is essentially a sequel, wherein Ms. Cunningham describes her life from the mid-1950's to Y2K. Indeed, the first couple of chapters reprise events of her life with Rosie and her uncles - all in the context of explaining her developing love for "the country". This is not unexpected in someone who grew up in small, overcrowded, city apartments. Most of the book revolves around the two rural homes in which the author has spent a good portion of her adult life, the Castle and The Inn, the latter having been her abode away from The City for the last 18 years up to the present.

Laura's life has been, in many ways, perfectly ordinary - probably not so different from the general pattern of yours or mine. Perhaps that's why it's so appealing. (We have here not the memoir of an obnoxious diva, whining and overpaid sports figure, or dysfunctional actor.) The author's great ability in sharing is her gentle, wry sense of humor, whether it's telling us about the trials of converting an old underground cistern into a swimming pool, or starting an ill-conceived cottage industry in potpourri pillows, or battling the local fauna over home-grown tomatoes, or the adoption of her first daughter from Romania, or her second daughter from China, or learning the pitfalls inherent to raising chickens, geese and goats. For instance ...

"I spent most of my time preparing the alleged garden, jumping on the end of a pickaxe, trying to tilt the tip of what might be a glacial formation (of rock) that extends to the core of the earth. When at last there was a thin strip of what we could call soil, we stuck in seeds, which were instantly lost and unidentifiable except to the birds that snacked on them. We graduated immediately to seedlings that cost as much as the finished vegetables. In this way, we worked our way up, with credit cards, to the six-hundred dollar tomato."

Not all of Laura's life in the country has been happy. In the later chapters, when she tells of the eventual dissolution of her 27-year marriage, or the neighbors that move away, or die, or just her slide into middle-age, the tone of A PLACE IN THE COUNTRY becomes occasionally melancholic. ("Time is supposed to march on, but now it hurtles.") But, her narrative never loses the sensitivity and poignancy that conveys to the reader the fact that she is, from all evidence, a truly good human being giving Life her best shot. A person that it would be an honor to hug.


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Bella New York! better than Provence or Tuscany!

I love to read about dream houses and people getting their wish fulfilled so this story of the poor little orphan from the bronx, who grew up in city apartments, seven people in three rooms, really moved me. The story is as sad as Angela's Ashes but funny as The Egg and I--It is a really fascinating mix of memoir and how a city person can live in the country. I could not put it down as Miss Cunningham lucks out and gets a romantic estate in upstate New York. The writing is as beautiful as the travel books but I liked it more as it is about our home country. It is not pretentious like some of those books --You don't have to be a millionaire to have a dream house come true! This is also a beautiful memoir of a special family. You have to read the first book, too, Sleeping Arrangements, because it dares to go where few writers are willing --the true secret unexpurgated lives of city kids. I was one too! LOVED THIS! What a pair of books! If you ever wanted country property, get this quick!


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4



In Sleeping Arrangements, Laura Shaine Cunningham introduced us to her childhood self. Now she tells us what became of that little girl--and her lifelong quest to find the perfect country home.



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