Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 910
EAN: 9780140294231
ISBN: 0140294236
Label: Penguin Books Ltd
Manufacturer: Penguin Books Ltd
Number Of Pages: 352
Publication Date: April 26, 2001
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Studio: Penguin Books Ltd
Sales Rank: 7039
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.co.uk Review: There is a natural inclination among lovers of the travel journal genre to compare Annie Hawes's Extra Virgin to the idyllic and idiosyncratic tales by Frances Mayes or Peter Mayle. Don't. Her saga has the well-built flow of fiction and self-effacing honesty of a journal.
Annie and her sister, Sarah, were in their early 20s when they left London for a 10-week job, pruning roses in the mountainous town of Diano San Pietro in Liguria, Italy. While Sarah is the sensible shadow in the book, it is Annie who falls in love withthe place and then the people and coming up on 20 years lives there still.
Youthful mistakes are rectified by a village mystified at the Hawes sisters: mystified that they would want to live in such conditions, that they know so little about olives, wine, food and life and that they are not--horrors--married. Time and time again she is confronted with the reality that is the life of a peasant farmer and in retelling the episodes of her own ignorance, she gives heartfelt flesh and bones to the characters.
Still, Hawes deftly drizzles an observer's scepticism about her adventure. "We gloat about the house, the food, the view, everything, whilst pondering the strange fact that if we saw a representation of this sunset on a postcard we wouldn't buy it. We would think it was tasteless." That she centred the story on the early, impressionable days and the gradual intimacy that developed, gives the book an energy that makes it stand apart. Although the final pages jump haphazardly into the present, Hawes's perspective is instructional about the economic and social changes that in 15 years moved the village from the 19th to the 21st century. Like any story with the ring of truth, Extra Virgin is very much a tale that will age well. --Kathleen Buckley
Synopsis: When Annie Hawes buys a hillside cottage in Italy for no more than the price of a dodgy second-hand car, a capable young Englishwoman becomes a surprisingly incapable Ligurian "signorina"...In the overgrown garden of a small, stone house amongst the olive groves of Liguria, high above the Mediterranean, a curious combination of bonfire dinner and business meeting occurs. In the area by chance, Annie and her sister have no intention of moving to the Italian Riviera. Still, they eat the fragrant, rosemary-skewered sausages, drink (perhaps a little too much of) the wine, and allow themselves to be taken on a moonlit tour of the ramshackle house and garden ...and fall in love with it all. Their new neighbours are baffled - how have these Foreign Females survived without learning to spot wild asparagus or tell good mushrooms from bad? Don't they have "any" idea how to get a supply of olive oil from a couple of dozen olive trees, or good wine from bramble-choked vines? Fortunately the hard-core olive-farming folk of Diano San Pietro are on hand to ply them with huge meals, plenty of ridicule and all the old-fashioned know-how they'll need to get by.
Average Rating: 
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what a lovely read this is, nicely suprising & not at all like the usual "year in a foreign country" type stuff. The stories of the Ligurian way of thinking "no swimming in the sea except in the height of summer - this brings on Flu"......"germans who horror of horror drink wine WITHOUT FOOD!!! GASP GASP"...."bottled wine is akin to poison & not even made from grapes".......Its also interesting that this was set many many years ago...before we all ate olive oil/sundried tomatoes/olives/tomatoes on the vine etc etc as a matter of course....funny & laigh out loud...i have since bought her next book & will be enjoying that very soon
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I had hoped for something like an Italian version of
the wonderful "Driving over Lemons" but was very disappointed.
Annie Hawes impersonal style means that we get to know
almost nothing about herself or her sister and therefore
their reported interactions with the local Ligurians are
one dimensional and rather boring. As she had decided to
reveal nothing about herself or her family we don't really
care what happens to them. This book is only of minor interest
as if you are interested in the ethnology of Ligurian
eating habits, which she repeatedly describes,
otherwise it is very dull. Avoid.
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Fanatastic if you love all things italian as I do. Read the series which tells you Annie's life in Italy, falling in love, getting to know the locals
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Just finished "Extra Virgin" as a talking book from my local library and wish that someone had recommended it to me sooner. It is beautifully written, absolutely charming and a joy to read (or listen to.) The tales of the sister's various scrapes along the steep learning curve of "apprentice peasants" had me screaming with laughter. How the initial hostility and suspicion of the locals warmed into curiosity and then lifelong friendship with these strange foreign sisters delighted and moved me. I cannot wait to read all of Annie Hawes books! In fact, I think I will go and buy one now!
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Well, i say i loved it, but i haven't yet finished the book, i am actually 2 chapters from the end. I have to say its one of the few books i have read lately, that i will be truly sorry to finish. Infact, i have gone out and got the next book in the series ('ripe for the picking')!
Annie Hawes describes her surroundings with such detail. She describes the people in the village to the point that i can really imagine them. Poor Annie was obviously clueless about many aspects of Italian life when she and her sister bought their house, but Annie isn't afraid to admit it, not to mention all the 'faux pas' they made with language, ettiquette and such like! She doesn't make the story 'twee' at all, and she describes the bad times (like ... Read More:
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