<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>On an impulse, Kimball shed her city self and moved to 500 acres near Lake Champlain to start a new farm with her husband. "The Dirty Life" is the captivating chronicle of their first year on Essex Farm, from the cold North Country winter through the following harvest season--complete with their wedding in the loft of the barn.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>From a "graceful, luminous writer with an eye for detail" (<i>Minneapolis Star Tribune</i>), this riveting memoir explores a year on a sustainable farm.</b> <p/>When Kristin Kimball left New York City to interview a dynamic young farmer named Mark, her world changed. On an impulse, she shed her city self and started a new farm with him on five hundred acres near Lake Champlain. <i>The Dirty Life</i> is the captivating chronicle of the couple's first year on Essex Farm, from the cold North Country winter through their harvest-season wedding in the loft of the barn. <p/>Kristin and Mark's plan to grow everything needed to feed a community was an ambitious idea, and a bit romantic. It worked. Every Friday evening, all year round, over a hundred people travel to Essex Farm to pick up their weekly share of the "whole diet"--beef, pork, chicken, milk, eggs, maple syrup, grains, flours, dried beans, herbs, fruits, and forty different vegetables--produced by the farm. In <i>The Dirty Life, </i>Kristin discovers the wrenching pleasures of physical work, learns that good food is at the center of a good life, falls deeply in love, and finally finds the engagement and commitment she craved in the form of a man, a small town, and a beautiful piece of land.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"<i>The Dirty Life</i> is a delightful, tumultuous, and tender story of the author's love affair with the man who becomes her husband and the farm they work together to restore. With wisdom and humor, Kristin Kimball describes how she abandoned her career in New York City, leaving behind everything she thought was important for a hard, distinctly unglamorous existence that turns out to be the most fulfilling thing she's ever done."<br> --<b>Jeannette Walls, author of <i>Half Broke Horses</i> and <i>The Glass Castle</i></b><br><br>"<i>The Dirty Life</i> is a wonderfully told tale of one of the most interesting farms in the country. If you want to understand the heart and soul of the new/old movement towards local food, this is the book you need. It's the voice of what comes next in this land, of the generation unleashed by Wendell Berry to do something really grand."<br> --<b>Bill McKibben, author <i>Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet</i></b><br><br>"As Kimball chronicles that first year in supple prose, the farm takes on vivid form, with the frustrations balancing the satisfactions and the dark complementing the light. Throughout the book, the author ably describes the various trials and tribulations involved... A hearty, chromatic account of a meaningful accomplishment in farming."<br> --<b>Kirkus Reviews</b><br><br>"In her beguiling memoir, Kimball describes the complex truth about the simple life in prose that is observant and lyrical, yet tempered by a farmer's lack of sentimentality."<br> --<i><b>Elle Magazine</b></i><br><br>"Kimball is a graceful, luminous writer with an eye for detail . . . How lucky we are to be able to step into that world with no sweat. I wished for a hundred pages more."<br> --<i><b>Minneapolis Star Tribune</b></i><br><br>"Kimball writes in vivid but unsentimental language, equal parts dirt and poetry."<br> --<i><b>Burlington Free Press</b></i><br><br>"The truest, most hilarious, and most affirming story of a beginning farmer that you could possibly find."<br> --<b>Barbara Damrosch, <i>The Washington Post</i></b><br>
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