I have always loved the country books written by Miss Read, aka Dora Saint. I love them because, although I grew up in a different part of the UK,I identified very strongly with the stories she wrote, having had a very similar upbringing. This book,however,has too much of an air of being a last attempt to make money out of the name Miss Read. I found the whole thing disjointed with no real theme, just a random collection of articles (or even parts of articles.) Also, given that I thought the collection had been compiled by her daughter, I found it rather jarring that the explanatory snippets nearly always referred to Dora; only once or twice is there a reference to 'my mother' (I don't know WHY I found it jarring,to be fair...). It is also difficult to tell sometimes whether Dora was writing about her own village of her fictional creations.
I borrowed this book from the library and I will not be purchasing a copy. The book illustrates all too well that, although Dora Saint was supremely good at portraying her chosen niche, she was not a great writer in any way (nor would she have claimed to be, I think). This book is too random in nature to satisfy;it doesn't really tell you anything about the author herself and none of the articles are of any great interest in themselves.