This book is so good! My family and I are reading it as an audiobook, and it are just amazing! James Herriot is a new vet who comes to England from Scotland to be an assistant to a man named Siegfried Farnon. Here James has many adventures from crazy cows to pampered dogs, James has his hands full. This book is just amazing. If DOGO would have allowed it, I would have put 6 stars. One of my favorite books. It really captures your heart, and you fall in love with the characters like Tristin, Siegfried's lovable, younger brother who can't do anything right or Tricki, a sweet, pampered dog, or Helen, a strong, confident girl whom James falls in love with. Every chapter is poetic, weaving in humor but also teaching about the difficulties there were as a vet in the mid 1900s. Everything about this book is amazing. I suggest it for 10+ for language, there is words that would not be appropriate for young readers. If you like animals, English books, and hilarious books, this is the book for you. This book is a mixture of humor, but it is also sweet. Some chapters will have you crying, and others will have you laughing so hard you are crying. James Herriot allows the reader a perceptive that I have never had in a book. You get to hear what he is thinking, which I think is splendid. There are also very funny lines in the book like when Siegfried was yelling at Tristin he said, "You bloody fool! You're sacked!" Overall, a great book. 5 stars for sure!
All Creatures Great and Small
By James Herriot
Interest Level | Reading Level | Reading A-Z | ATOS | Word Count |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grades 6 - 8 | Grades 10 - 9 | n/a | 6.8 | 155989 |
James Herriot was a country veterinarion who lived in Yorkshire before (and after) World War II. His stories are funny, heartwarming, sad, and highly educational. And after reading this, you will either want to be a vet or be very grateful that you aren't one. The book opens (after a brief chapter taking place several months later) with James arriving in Yorkshire, to be the assistant to the eccentric but kindly Siegfried Farnon (yes, that is his name). He becomes accustomed to Siegfried, Siegfried's mischievous younger brother Tristan (yes, that is his name), and the gruff, kindly farmers who eke out a living in the Yorkshire Dales. Pampered pooches who are spoiled rotten, savage pigs who chase Tristan around the farm, a nightmarishly strict secretary who drives Siegfried up the wall, James's car-with-no-brakes, cows running on three cylinders, a sadistic vet who makes James wear a rubber bodysuit, and an elderly, immensely wealthy widow who adopts a pig. And through this, James falls in love with the beautiful Helen Alderson and worms his way into the trust of the farmers. James Herriot (real name, James Wight) was truly a one-of-a-kind man. He let readers into his head throughout the book, where the cows kick him across the yard, farmers often treat him as an interloper or a nuisance, and his boss gives contradicting orders from one day to the next. But he never loses his drive or his love of animals. (Okay, he hates some animals, but only as individuals) He even lets the readers see him at his worst, when he's humiliated by some recalcitrant livestock, and one horrible scene where he and his date show up drunk and mud-smeared in front of the girl he adores.Read more ›
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
ISBN-13: 9781250057839
ISBN-10: 1250057833
Published on 5/6/2014
Binding: Paperback
Number of pages: 448