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The Olive Season

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Carol Drinkwater's bestselling book, The Olive Farm, told the lyrical tale of her real-life romance with partner Michel and the abandoned Provencal olive farm which they fell in love with and bought. The Olive Season begins with their realization of another dream, a tropical island wedding: Returning to France, they find ever-reliable Arab gardener Quashia is leaving to marry off his youngest son.
It is a bad blow. To gain the coveted AGC rating, Carol needs to plant a further 250 olive trees. Now, pregnant and often unassisted, she will have to do the bulk of the farm work. She struggles to find a water diviner to check for sources on the property. Then there is the matter of locating an elusive beekeeper who she hopes will place hives on the land in exchange for honey. And the harvest season is fast approaching...
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      As a mistreated child, Drinkwater had two escapes--writing and acting. Both come into play here, as she's now a professional actress (the vet James's wife in "All Creatures Great and Small") who writes of her idyllic marriage, devastating miscarriage, and ongoing domestic life, all set against the backdrop of her farm in Provence. Not a word, English or French, is lost as she expresses love for her often absent husband, a film producer; sadness at losing their child; outrage at developers who want to despoil the countryside; and determination to get her olive crop harvested and pressed. Her conversations with neighbors and employees are as vivid as if they happened yesterday. If you're enchanted by this production, go back and listen to the prequel (OLIVE FARM, Clipper Audio). J.B.G. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 31, 2003
      Striking a lovely balance of memoir, travelogue and olive-growing how-to, Drinkwater (The Olive Farm) delivers a richly textured account of her enviable life in southern France. She and her husband return from their wedding in Polynesia to their farm: "erched halfway up the slope of the hill, our belle époque
      villa comes into view. Abounding in balustrade terraces, nestling among cedars and palms... overlooking the bay of Cannes towards the sun-kissed Mediterranean, there it is." The author's roots are in acting, and her dramatic flair turns mundane chores—e.g., spraying olive trees with fungicide; learning the basics of beekeeping—into colorful celebrations of nature. Some of her adventures are quite funny, such as a stuffy dinner at a British Lady's home—it's the French equivalent of a McMansion, in a housing development "where the enormously wealthy and overly paranoid can vacation with peace of mind, secure in the knowledge that armed guards and coded gates keep the rest of the south of France out of sight and at bay." Drinkwater's description of her dinner companion at that gathering—"a convivial, lobster-faced aristocrat" who makes her feel like she's "in the company of a steaming kettle"—typifies her pointed yet kindhearted sense of humor. But at the heart of these optimistic musings lies Drinkwater's desire for a child of her own (her husband has daughters from a previous marriage), and this book is heartbreakingly framed around near-fulfillment of that dream. Drinkwater succeeds in illustrating not only the graceful countryside, but the buoying power of an adopted community and a devoted spouse. Agent, Ed Victor. (May 26)Forecast:The popularity of Drinkwater's previous book creates a ready audience for this one; a $30,000 advertising campaign and author appearances will help.

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