Sissinghurst
An Unfinished History
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Narrated by:
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Jeremy Clyde
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By:
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Adam Nicolson
About this listen
Adam Nicolson has uncovered remarkable new findings about its history as a medieval manor and on to the creation, by his grandparents Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson, of a garden in a weed-strewn wreck.
Alongside his recovery of the past, Adam Nicolson wanted something else: for the land at Sissinghurst to become the landscape of orchards, cattle and sheep he remembered from his boyhood. Could that living frame of a mixed farm be brought back? Against the odds, he was going to try.
©2009 Adam Nicolson (P)2009 Isis Publishing LtdWhat listeners say about Sissinghurst
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- John Hayes
- 19-01-22
So much History & more.
I enjoyed the narration and the history behind, not just Sissinghurst, but the Weald of Kent and beyond, plus of course the Nicolson family.
The negotiations between the National Trust & AN is insightful and honest and I thought well balanced.
The extra section on the history of the countryside was fascinating, place names, farming, life in general and where the people came from, including their language, excellent stuff.
Great narration, perfect tempo & delivery was a bonus, all in all a really enjoyable listen.
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- Mrs. Mary Y. Berry
- 21-09-18
fantastic
you learn so much about our country as well as Sissinghurst a truly awesome book and so well read
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Philip
- 22-02-11
interesting but idealistic
This is really two books, interleaved chapter by chapter- one is a history of the Kentish Weald and Sissinghurst through the ages. The other book is about Adam Nicholson and Sissinghurst.
Both books are interesting in their way- but the second one became a little tiresome and -worse- Organic. The main thrust is that Adam Nicholson remembers his childhood at Sissinghurst when Sissinghurst castle stood in the middle of a mixed farm- cattle, hops, apples- and it was lovely (because he was a child, because he didn't have to do any of the back-breaking work- because he didn't have to worry about the profit and loss- and because (reading between the lines) his mother was still there.)
Times change- the 'green revolution' went ahead, in Sissinghurst as well as everywhere else and the farm essentially dissappeared into pasture and arable fields... So along comes Adam Nicholson and wants the farm once more to be alive and vibrant- it's a lovely idea- but to my mind it smacks of trying to recreate a lost eden- and an eden, moreover, that was only really beautiful to those who could sit on the sidelines and watch.
Turning back the clock- or at least making it stand still, is something of a National Trust speciality, but even they baulked at the idea of trying to fly in the face of 50years of farming progress. Adam Nicholson's tussles with the NT and the adaptations of his scheme are very interesting- but interesting in a different way from the history chapters- it's like listening to a mix of timeless history with of-the-moment journalism.
Brilliantly read- except the reader pronounced the first syllable of 'Goudhurst' 'Goued' whereas I've always understood it rhymed with 'Cowed'
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3 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Ian1956
- 02-08-10
Balanced
A nicely researched piece, interspersing history (perhaps a touch speculative at times, but often the evidence simply isn't to be had) with a contemporary story of life living with/under the National Trust. Nicolson's is a privileged world, but he understands the toil of those who sustained the house and farm. Such folk come out more favourably than the bitter, impoverished aristocracy who have never come to terms with the NT.
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1 person found this helpful