In The Birdhouse Chronicles, Miller describes her back-to-the-land experiences in an old, run-down Pennsylvania farm house. Miller and her husband, Kerby, decide to leave their careers in advertising in San Francisco and pursue a simpler life in Pennsylvania's Amish countryside. In this account of their three year stay in the country, Miller takes us through her battles with an ancient furnace, her husband's jobs in construction and woodcraft, planting a vegetable garden and canning the overflow, the trails the Amish farmer faces in a modern age, and much more.
I originally bought the book because it had one exceptionally bad review on Amazon. One reviewer was so offended by the way Miller treated (in writing) her neighbors that this reviewer sent in her review twice. I was intrigued because this was a trap I wanted to avoid. Miller does, in fact, use her caustic wit to great advantage in describing some of the locals, and I concluded that what might be amusing to her San Francisco audience would, indeed, seem insulting to someone who was her neighbor. Would the book have suffered without her jibes? Probably not,and though her descriptions are funny, they set up a 'them-vs-us'attitude which is somewhat unpleasant.