Marvellous, finely written account of the trials and tribulations experienced by a couple who gave up the pleasures of the meretricious metropolis for a life of trying to survive by growing and selling flowers and potatoes in far west Cornwall. The book was first published in 1961, but by this point they have struggled through their first few seasons and evidently achieved a measure of financial stability. As one who was also fortunate to live in Penwith, albeit briefly, and visited Lamorna regularly, this tale's setting is delightfully familiar. It's easy to see how it could have inspired people to leave the rat race for all the wrong reasons; easy too to cast a romanticised eye over it, but the author is always clear about their motives and the back-breaking and sometimes heart-breaking work involved in finally managing to survive. In their trial-and-error methods, unreliable or useless machinery, pointless bureaucrats, endless fretting over expenditure and income, and false hopes, as well the immediate post-war period in which it's set, it reminded me somewhat of Gavin Maxwell's 'Harpoon at a Venture'. Many sequels and anthologies followed, but this is the place to start. Vix bought this for me on a birthday holiday in Padstow, at the opposite corner of the County, over five years ago, but I finally devoured it only now, over two days on the seat in our gloriously flowery and green garden under a hot English sun.