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Here and Nowhere Else : Late Seasons of a Farm and Its Family

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After years living away, Jane Brox made the decision to return to the family farm of her birth, where her aging father still tended their crops, assisted by her troubled brother and other members of the community. In this memoir of her re-introduction to the land and its habits, Brox captures the cadences of farm life and those who sustain it, at a time when the viability of both are waning.

160 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1995

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About the author

Jane Brox

9 books23 followers
JANE BROX is the author of Clearing Land, Five Thousand Days Like This One, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Here and Nowhere Else, which received the L. L. Winship/PEN New England Award. She lives in Maine"

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Kathleen F.
49 reviews12 followers
February 20, 2010
This was such a fantastic palate cleanser after reading Mantel's Wolf Hall. Brox's portrait of her family farm in the Merrimack Valley of Massachusetts is slow and meditative and lovely. I suppose I am somewhat biased in my love for books about people who live close to the land, who observe it, hallow it, grow things in it. Part of what is compelling in this book, however, unlike similar works from the likes of Barbara Kingsolver, is that it reads more as an elegy to Brox's slowly dying family farm than a celebration of an organic lifestyle. Of course the fact that the book was published 15 years ago, before local food movements had become vogue, and when Farm Aid was still in its heyday, may also have something to do with it.

If I have any complaint, it is simply that I wanted more. Brox hints at things that I hope she will take up in her later essays/memoirs: her brother's troubled life, her own desire to write, her mixed feelings about her relationship to the family business. But I must say I was thrilled that I could read this little gem cover-to-cover in only a few hours.
Profile Image for Lauren Csaki.
181 reviews3 followers
December 19, 2020
Beautiful memoir! She’s a very poetic writer. I really enjoyed the writing style—she kind of hops from story to story in a not necessarily linear narrative. It’s like if you spent time looking through each window of a house, and by the end you come to a kind of understanding of the family who lives there.
Profile Image for Kayli Schwantz.
92 reviews
May 15, 2025
A sweet story about a family and their generational farm. Reminded me of my family and the ever present talk of what the farm’s future will be. Thanks to the book I will be attempting to make a squash 🥧 this year for Thanksgiving!
Profile Image for Sandy D..
1,019 reviews35 followers
July 17, 2009
This is the poetically written story of a woman coming back to her family's produce farm (she doesn't call it a "truck farm", but that's what we call them in the midwest) near Lawrence, MA, to help with the farm work and the roadside stand, and how she deals with her aging parents and dysfunctional brother. She draws her portraits of the land, the work, the woods, their old houses, the changing town, and her family history together in a way that is just a pleasure to read.
Profile Image for William.
5 reviews1 follower
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October 8, 2014
Beautifully describes my hometown (Dracut, Mass.), which is the same as the author's. I see these farms, woods, streams, and cemeteries every day, so I can attest that her description of the locale is spot-on, giving a poetic touch to the natural glories I so often have taken for granted.
Profile Image for Viva.
43 reviews12 followers
August 14, 2008
Beautiful almost poemlike nonfiction about a dying farm in Western Mass and what it feels like to be in the pull of land and family.
4 reviews2 followers
September 12, 2008
The truth of an New England farm family, the good, the bad and the survival of it all.
23 reviews2 followers
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December 9, 2009
A beautifully written memoir about the author's return to her family farm and the inevitability of letting it go. A very poignant and poetic piece.
Profile Image for Shirley.
15 reviews
January 14, 2012
This book is quiet, understated, but very moving, beautifully written. Noone escapes unscathed.
Profile Image for Jess.
127 reviews
April 3, 2012
This was more poetic than a novel I suppose.. I wasn't quite in the mood to think, analyze or interpret, although on the surface level it was quite obvious. I was glad it was short.
Profile Image for Diana.
698 reviews12 followers
September 22, 2012
Another great book by Jane Brox. She writes beautifully - very poetic. Her descriptions of nature are spot-on: some make me cry.
Profile Image for Cathy.
497 reviews6 followers
November 8, 2015
A slim, intimate look into the everyday life on a New England family farm. Brox is also a poet and this lyrical style carries through in her voice.
7 reviews
June 26, 2007
Very well written and wonderful descriptions of nature/farms/families.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews