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Call the Vet
Call the Vet
Nov 16, 2024 6:29 PM

Author:Anna Birch

Call the Vet

When fresh-faced, newly qualified vet Anna arrives in the seemingly sleepy Dorset village of Ebbourne, little does she know that this tiny rural community is about to change her life …

Straight in at the deep end, Anna faces two tricky calvings, an emergency call-out to a frightened mare, lots of mad cats (and mad cat women) and one enormous dog with an injured leg and a threatening bark. Spirited and determined, Anna quickly finds her feet and falls in love with rural life, including Ebbourne’s eccentric characters and their animals.

Disasters, dramas, farmers and friendship – and not to mention a whirlwind romance with a local Wildlife Trust worker – this warm and witty memoir offers a window into what working with animals and country life is really all about.

Reviews

Ross’s vivid evocation of a Seventies childhood ... has great charm. Anyone who grew up in the era of Benny Hill, cheesecloth and Charlie’s Angels will find it irresistible.

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

Charged with delicious quirky wit and a joyful celebration of the ordinary, this is an irresistible account of a child's passage towards the adult world.

—— Rachel Joyce

Hippy Dinners is an absolute joy ... It is both sweetly moving and killingly funny.

—— Horatio Clare

Spot on and very funny about desperately wanting to be normal.

—— Nina Stibbe, Author of Love, Nina

Shot through with wit that is at once knife-sharp and full of warmth, HIPPY DINNERS recreates the fragile, half-understood world of childhood with glorious polaroid immediacy. I loved it.

—— Christopher Wakling

An outstanding debut, and a wonderfully antidote to misery memoirs. Hippy Dinners is so good, so funny, so true. Abbie Ross has a pitch perfect ear and eye for how children distort and magnify life , how they talk to each other, their humiliations and joys.

—— Julia Gregson, Author of Jasmine Nights

An irresistible childhood memoir [and] a brilliant evocation of a particular period in the early 70s – a world of cheesecloth, home-made brown bread and John Craven’s Newsround. Warm, laugh-out-loud, enchanting - read it now!

—— Good Housekeeping

The characters are fondly drawn - particularly little Philip.

—— The Sunday Times

An astute portrait of the realities of 'a simple life' and rich with detail and full of heart.

—— The Lady

A sweet-natured memoir... Ross is excellent at conveying her desire to conform...Hippy Dinners deftly conveys the child's sense of powerlessness and confusion in a world she - and worse even the adults around her - can't control.

—— Victoria Segal , Guardian

Made me laugh out loud

—— Kate Hamer - author of The Girl with the Red Coat , Financial Times

Disquieting but riveting . . . fascinating . . . Schlosser's readers (and he deserves a great many) will be struck by how frequently the people he cites attribute the absence of accidental explosions and nuclear war to divine intervention or sheer luck rather than to human wisdom and skill. Whatever was responsible, we will clearly need many more of it in the years to come

—— New York Times Book Review

Easily the most unsettling work of nonfiction I've ever read, Schlosser's six-year investigation of America's 'broken arrows' (nuclear weapons mishaps) is by and large historical-this stuff is top secret, after all-but the book is beyond relevant. It's critical reading in a nation with thousands of nukes still on hair-trigger alert . . . Command and Control reads like a character-driven thriller as Schlosser draws on his deep reporting, extensive interviews, and documents obtained via the Freedom of Information Act to demonstrate how human error, computer glitches, dilution of authority, poor communications, occasional incompetence, and the routine hoarding of crucial information have nearly brought about our worst nightmare on numerous occasions

—— Mother Jones

A powerful mix of history, politics, and technology, told with impressive authority

—— Independent

Eric Schlosser brings the investigative rigour of his big hit Fast Food Nation to this overview of our global nuclear arsenal

—— Herald

Local history raised by water power to the status of allegorical memoir... In searching for the Wye, the author is also looking for something that is 'far more deeply interfused'

—— John Greening , Country Life

The author has a fine eye for the telling detail, and an even finer ear; the human noise which drowns out the gentler sounds of nature has seldom been anatomised better

—— Alex Sarll , Western Daily Press

This is an intimate exploration of the interaction between humans and landscape down the ages

—— Country Walking

A compelling read

—— Choice

A fascinating and fun read

—— UK Press Syndication

The Knowledge impresses as a condensed history of scientific progress, and will pique curiosity among readers who regret daydreaming throughout school chemistry lessons. Like this reviewer, some will be troubled by their ignorance of the basics, and how useless that could render them if the lights do go out

—— Iain Morris , Observer

A hymn to human ingenuity… Essential reading

—— Michael Brooks , New Statesman

If the world ends with a bang or a whimper make sure you have a copy of this book to hand, or you won’t have a clue how to survive or kick-start the new civilisation

—— Good Book Guide

An engaging and wide-ranging discussion of the scientific discoveries and technological innovations that underpin our lives… Littered with fascinating facts and an infectious enthusiasm for science and technology shines through in the accessible and lively writing… An absorbing thought experiment which celebrates the insight and ingenuity which has made this habitable planet into a civilized world

—— Olivia Johnson , BBC Sky at Night Magazine

There is no better guide to the basic science and engineering that underlies our everyday life than this clear and fascinating book

—— Lord Martin Rees

A great idea for a book… Excellent and intriguing

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

The conceit that this is a handbook for rebooting modern civilization is really just a cute way of framing what turns out to be a terrifically engrossing history of science and technology

—— Steven Poole , Guardian

There is great depth and insight in The Knowledge, which is brilliantly imaginative and thorough in its study of science and technology

—— Antonia Charlesworth , Big Issue

This book should be on everyone’s bookshelf, just in case the worst happens… The one guide you need to rebuild civilisation

—— Sally Hewitt , UK Press Syndication

an eye-opening dose of fantastical reality

—— Roisin Kiberd , Totally Dublin
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