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Olive #1

Маслиновата ферма

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Каръл е британска актриса, обиколила целия свят, която винаги е жадувала за дом сред природата. Мечтата й става реалност, когато с приятеля й Мишел се влюбват в изоставена вила в Прованс. Къщата е с буренясали маслинови градини и изглед към Средиземно море. Всичките им спестявания отиват, за да купят вилата и десет акра земя към нея. Двамата заедно посрещат трудностите по обновяването й с ограничен бюджет, но въпреки лишенията, всеки ден откриват нови радости. Красотата на френската провинция и великолепната храна ги очароват. Макар прекомерните изисквания на френската бюрокрация да ги влудяват.

Каръл и Мишел превръщат занемарената къща в процъфтяваща маслинова ферма със собствена реколта от първокачествен зехтин. И заедно се учат да живеят нов живот. Каръл се отърсва от болезнената си амбиция и е готова на саможертви. Но не съжалява.

Ала когато е напът да загуби Мишел, Каръл съзнава, че и най-прекрасното място на света губи своето очарование, ако в него няма любов.

336 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

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About the author

Carol Drinkwater

40 books417 followers
Carol Drinkwater is an Anglo-Irish actress, author and filmmaker.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 313 reviews
Profile Image for Leftbanker.
878 reviews403 followers
November 8, 2021
It begins with her spoiled progeny whining because they don’t have a swimming pool…right now! The tone is set.

More lifestyle porn. Jesus, another A Year in Provence, Under the Tuscan Sun -esque memoir of an over-privileged hack who buys an old place in a foreign land and fixes it up. She makes it appear in this book that she is so original in wanting to buy a romantic old farm in France. Who the hell wouldn’t want to do this if they had the resources? She acts like she is such a maverick for choosing to live in a country mansion in the south of France.

This book should be subtitled: Every noun must have an adjective, every verb an adverb. The hoariest prose I've ever stumbled across. She is trying much too hard to make this a creative writing exercise, and why would anyone do that in the first place because "creative writing" of the self-conscious variety is rubbish. All of it.

The whole tone of the memoir is that of we the readers must care so very dearly for the people involved. Spoiler alert: I don't, not even a little before I began, and after a few pages of hearing about the lives of the privileged and solipsistic, I have zero interest in her dramatic personae. I had never heard of her and I've never seen anything she has appeared in, so I wasn't the least bit invested in her as a celebrity, which shouldn't matter at all to anyone, but I'm sure this sold most of the books.

Here she is talking about her idyllic wonderland:

And, in among all of these gregarious and bohemian activities, I slip away unnoticed to a cool stone room of my own, lined head to foot with books, sprawling with maps and dictionaries, switch on my computer and settle down peacefully to write.

Maybe I’m being too snarky but it sure seems to me like she could use the practice…and an editor. Can you bear to read more?

Summer is slipping away, like the silent falling of petals [Don’t petals fall in spring?]. Everyone has left, and we are on our own. The swallows gather, autumn sets in, rustic and rather rainy.

Horrible, n'est ce pas? And for someone who admits to speaking poor French, she loves to litter her writing with words from her second, poorly-spoken language, as if her random mais ouis and zut alors give her French street cred.

There is a bit about olives to be learned but it just isn’t worth the effort.

Epilogue

As an Aerican who has lived in Europe over much of my adult life, I feel I have an excellent vantage point when it comes to talking about expat life. If your dream is to move to the Mediterranean and live off in some secluded farmhouse, you are letting one of the best things about life here pass you by which is city life. I wouldn’t trade my little neighborhood for any sprawling mansion in the country.
Profile Image for Jessaka.
952 reviews177 followers
March 28, 2021
A Charmed Life’]]

I was talking on the phone to a Kindle technician in Costa Rica, a country where I believe I would love to live, when I heard some birds singing in the background. I mentioned it, and she said that she lived in the mountains, and that there were a lot of birds there, and her window was open. Then I heard a rooster. She apologized, but I was enthralled. I said, “You live a charmed life.”

Carol Drinkwater lives a charmed life too. She is an actress/writer who played the part of Aunt Harriot in the TV series, “All Creatures Great and Small.” And the new man in her life, Michelle, is a play write. Together they buy a villa in France, one with an olive orchard. While I do not call acting a “charmed life,” I do like the idea of renovating homes. My husband and I had worked on three homes in our lifetime, and this is somethiing that I loved doing, so I am drawn to books where someone buys a home and renovates it. My first book on this subject was “Under the Tuscan Sun.” I must read it again someday. This book reminds me of it, and I found myself not being able to put the book down, and when I had to, I thought about it until I picked it up again. I was unhappy when I finished the book, but then I learned that she has two sequels, and I am halfway finished with the second book.

But this book is not just about their remodeling, mostly with the help of others, it is about their show life and some other travels, especially those in France where they go looking for things like more olive trees to buy, or when they want to eat in a restaurant, etc. But, my idea of a charmed life, is to not have to act; instead, write more books at home and have enough money to buy what ou need for the house. Their money was always slim pickings, and whenever they received a paycheck, they would use it to buy more plants or get another project done. I think they should have put in a fence to keep the wild boars out. Anyway, that is what I would have done right away.
Profile Image for Emmkay.
1,268 reviews121 followers
November 7, 2021
I picked this up cold off the library shelf, curious because I remembered watching the author play Helen on All Creatures Great and Small on tv when I was young - I had no idea she went on to be an author, but apparently she has written quite a lot. This one is the first of a series of memoirs of her life on - not a surprise - an olive farm in Provence. In this volume, she and her partner bought - with difficulty - and began to restore the farm, which was derelict. It’s a familiar subgenre, and I enjoyed much of it - the escapist envy balanced with the slight Schadenfreude when roofs leak and wild boars approach (always comforting to think well, I wouldn’t like THAT). It sagged rather in the middle and, very unfortunately, though it was published 20 years ago, contained a couple of ill-advised racialized terms that stood out to me. I would hope if it’s re-published they would be omitted. But overall it was a pretty pleasant read.
Profile Image for Nina Draganova.
1,065 reviews61 followers
June 18, 2017
Пиршество на сетивата!
Вкусове, аромати, чувства .....
Забравих къде съм.
През цялото време духовно присъствах на мястото, което описва с такава любов.
Толкова увлекателно е разказала собствената си история .
Такъв богат език.
Преди време едва ли бих прочела такъв тип книга, в която няма много пряка реч и повече прилича на пътепис.
Но сега все повече ме вълнуват тези неща, още повече описани така необикновено.
Чувствам се изпълнена и доволна.


Profile Image for Bill.
1,734 reviews93 followers
August 19, 2014
I started off this story with somewhat mixed feelings, not sure it was my kind of story, but very quickly I came to enjoy Carol Drinkwater's gentle writing style. The story is fascinating, her journey to southern France with her partner, Michel, and their efforts to turn an abandoned estate and olive farm into their dream home. All the while both must try and earn the money to buy the home, maintain it and live in it. Very well-told, draws you in very quickly and makes you emotionally involved with their lives. There are two other books in this series, I will definitely have to get them to see how the work progresses for Carol, Michel and their companions and 3 dogs.. :) Loved it..
Profile Image for Courtney.
235 reviews2 followers
March 6, 2015
The Olive Farm was a feast for the senses. Drinkwater's descriptions are so vivid that you are transported to Provence with its blue skies, fragrant fruits and flowers and rocky soil. Drinkwater has a love affair with the land and a love affair with a Frenchman, both of which are excellent fodder for a story. It was an easy and very enjoyable read.
Profile Image for David Canford.
Author 14 books32 followers
August 4, 2023
The author is probably best known for being in the first series of ‘All Creatures Great and Small' back in the late 1970s. I recently enjoyed watching her TV series ‘Secret Provence’ so got her first book about her life there.
It is a delightful account of the author and her husband buying a wreck of a house without water and other services in the hills above Cannes and with acres of overgrown land. When they clear it, they find they have many olive trees, as well as fig trees, almond trees and lemon trees, and she becomes passionate about learning to be an olive farmer.
The book transports you to a place of sunshine, far reaching views of sea and mountains, and the French lifestyle of good food and wine and taking time to enjoy being alive.
The author has a warm and engaging style of writing and is ever curious and adventurous. Occasionally she overdoes the similes with three in a row, but it is still a great book.
I’d like to read her two books about her journeys across the Mediterranean to investigate the history of olives.
Profile Image for Amy.
120 reviews15 followers
April 19, 2011
It was a sappy memoir of her life and the drama she has with the farm. If you are expecting to read about the farm and its transformation this is not the book for you; which is a pity because it could've been done with this book. I wish someone would write a memoir of a place where the place is the center of the story.
Profile Image for Cherie.
1,325 reviews131 followers
April 13, 2018
It was okay and I liked it enough to bump up my rating to three stars but this book will be DNF for me.

Nothing against the author or the story as far as I went, but I got enough out of the story that I just cannot pick it up again. I am returning it to the library. I probably should not have done as much on-line research as I did. It killed my desire to finish.
Profile Image for Art enn Viu.
4 reviews4 followers
September 21, 2022
Юли е времето на дългите почивки, горещи обеди и време за книга, която не те въвлича в тежки и трудни ситуации, а напротив - носи те по вълните и нещата просто се случват. А какво по-хубаво от това да се случват в Прованс?
“Масленовата ферма” е една тиха мечта.
Колко често се случва да мислите за някое малко градче, далеч от градската суматоха, в което да откриете онази вила, вашата, и да се впуснете с всички сили по възстановяването й, дори и то да е осъществимо само в главата ви? А представете си да върви с маслинова горичка и гледка към Средиземно море.
Звучи чудесно, за да е истина и Каръл и Мишел се сблъскват с куп проблеми от едно привидно прибързано решение. Решение, което променя изцяло живота им.
Описанията на пейзажите, обграждащи френската провинция и храната, която е едно отделно пътуване за сетивата, са неизменна част от тази история, която просто ще ви накара да спрете и усетите онова спокойствие, което витае в тези мечти и в очарованието на Прованс.
34 reviews3 followers
March 18, 2016
Carol Drinkwater's account of bringing an olive farm in the south of France back to life is so rich in detail and characterization that I feel as though I am experiencing it with her. Her prose draws me in and holds my attention so powerfully that I cannot wait for the next page. And the next. And the next. We meet her fiance, with whom she has purchased the farm, their dogs, his daughters, his parents, her parents, and their eccentric, able accomplices in restoring the farm to productivity, Rene and Quashia, and feel that they are old friends as the book draws to a close.

I read the book practically straight through over three days, pausing only for such mundane things as meals, appointments and sleep, always eager to return to the verbal feast Miss Drinkwater serves up by the bucketful. I first read The Olive Farm 5 or 6 years ago, yet it is so fresh and rich that it seems as though I have never before picked up the book. I look forward to reading it again in a few years.
Profile Image for Carol.
227 reviews
June 18, 2017
I thoroughly enjoyed this memoir about an actress and her fiance buying an abandoned villa and its overgrown grounds full of olive trees. Drinkwater writes so colorfully about her experiences, transporting the reader to this beautiful region. It's similar in its angle (foreigner in foreign land; the quirky country people, run-down house, odd and frustrating ways of doing business) to A Year in Provence and Under the Tuscan Sun, but it's much more readable. Drinkwater is a natural story teller.

Interestingly, when they were there in the 1980s (it's never quite clear in the book when this took place, but Google Carol Drinkwater and you can find out more precisely) Drinkwater mentions the mindset of "Le Pen" and his brand of conservatism summed up as more or less keeping France French, i.e, keeping out immigrants. In 2017, the mindset was alive in well in his daughter, Marine, who ran for president (and lost). It was insightful that the French depended on a cheap North African workforce to toil in their fields yet never considered them citizens or worthy of respect. How deep those feelings of resentment, sown for decades, probably longer, does influence the world today....

Aside from that, both Carol and Michel worked so hard themselves to revive Appassionata and thank goodness there are dreamers like that in the world to do that and give the rest of us dreamers a reality check that such undertakings are truly difficult, expensive undertakings. It all seems worth it in the end. But I never understood how anyone would buy a house without knowing there was running water or electricity! (there was but not for months).
Profile Image for Lisa (Harmonybites).
1,834 reviews362 followers
February 26, 2013
I read this book because it was recommended in The Ultimate Reading List under the Travel section. Unfortunately, I had read it after very similar books on the list: Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence, Frances Mayes Under the Tuscan Sun and Chris Stewart's Driving Over Lemons. Like Mayles, Drinkwater is a foreigner who decides to settle in Provence. Like Stewart, she plunges her life savings into land she tries to make into a working farm. And like Mayes, there's a romantic villa on the property. But I didn't find Drinkwater as engaging a writer as the others--and I have found this is by no means a favored genre. I didn't finish A Year in Provence and I didn't finish The Olive Farm, although I gave it longer than Mayles' book, over a hundred pages before admitting to myself I was bored. I thought Under the Tuscan Sun not only lyrical with sensuous sensory details, but more eloquent about the history and nature surrounding the villa. Drinkwater I often found more purple than lyrical, and writing in first person present does not by itself a literary style make. Chris Stewart was more down-to-earth and charming, and gave me more of a sense of the people and culture surrounding his Spanish farm. I found Drinkwater in comparison rather bland. In so much of this story I felt I'd been there, done that--and better done too.
Profile Image for Meg - A Bookish Affair.
2,467 reviews200 followers
June 10, 2011
Guys, I think we all have a place that we dream about living out our days in. It might be a beach with an umbrella drink in our hands, a huge bookstore with big comfy chairs or a gorgeous mountain vista. For me, I think I want peace and quiet. I love, love, love city living right now but eventually, I'd love a slower pace of life. With this book, I think Ms. Drinkwater has me convinced that an olive farm would be the place to be.


The book does drag on in some parts a little bit but I love reading memoirs of people who have been able to do what they wanted to do with their life so that kept me going. It's most definitely inspirational. Drinkwater paints a gorgeous picture of easy (and sometimes not so easy) living in gorgeous Southern France. This is really a vacation in a book. If you can't get away on vacation this summer, this book is just the prescription for you.


Bottom line: this book is a sweet escape!

(Also posted at http://abookishaffair.blogspot.com/)
Profile Image for Lucy.
307 reviews30 followers
June 24, 2011
This was a scrumptious tale of Carol and Michael's attempts to cultivate a pleasant life in their ramshackle rundown olive farm in the South of France.
I very much enjoyed it.

Carol is a very personable narrator and her descriptions are rich and tasty. Her relationships with her pets, her family, her friends and her neighbours provide many amusing and heartwarming anecdotes and she has a pleasingly warm and self-depricating style.

However it is food (not least of course the olive) that is at the heart of this tale and is what drew me to the book in the first place. Whilst predominantly an accompaniment to a bigger story, the french fare undoubtedly plays an important role in this production; it riles your tastebuds with stories of fresh lemons and crusty loaves, invokes scents of provincial herbs and pinecone barbecues and positively encourages you to indulge in a glass of red wine and a bowl of olives.

All in all, a pretty wonderful epicurean experience.
765 reviews2 followers
August 26, 2013
I apologise if I am letting my working-class background over-influence me but I rather felt this memoir was about two rich privileged people trying to establish a more graceful way of life funded by others. Carol was writing scripts which her partner was arranging to have filmed (no apparent struggles to have her pitches accepted & when they needed more money he took her on a boat trip to inspire her to write a new story - one day is clearly enough to suggest the locations which will be suitable). As you read the book you think they were probably hoping that her book about their "struggles" would also sell well and help fund further developments. Having said which, the difficulties of trying to restore a derelict property with the help and hindrance of locals was interesting. The farm is in an area of great contrasts and challenges. The writing is engaging, including a mix of facts and personal observations.
Profile Image for Joan.
23 reviews
January 17, 2014
Part of me loved this novel about an actress in a relationship with a French film director who buy a farm in the South of France not far from Cannes. The farm is neglected and needs some serious TLC and they are more than willing to do that. It sounds ideallic, his daughters come to stay and they love it and other family come out to chill out, quaff wine and plan renovations though rose tinted spectacles. She managed with her descriptions to make the reader yearn for foreign climes and whilst not that much was going on storywise and the characters were sketchily drawn I was perfectly happy reading about someone's perfect place, perfect dream. Ultimately that is what in the end I didn't like, although there were some trials and tribulations along the way there never seemed to be a cross word spoken and the perfection of their life, relationship and future in the end seemed too sugar coated. Worth a read for an escape though.
Profile Image for Kristen.
105 reviews
March 12, 2018
I really, truly wanted to love this book. It was recommended as being in the vein of "Under the Tuscan Sun" which I LOVED so I was very excited to read this. Unfortunately, this book was kind of a let down. Carol Drinkwater's voice is not nearly as compelling as Francis Mayes and the story itself never really caught my imagination. It's not that there weren't compelling memories shared but it felt like she glossed over moments that should have been given more attention, and gave too much attention to other inconsequential moments. I never really connected to her story the way I did to Mayes' memoir so I didn't enjoy this nearly as much as some others I've read in the same vein.
Profile Image for E.J. Bauer.
Author 3 books67 followers
August 10, 2019
Let's face it, I'm always ready to read about life in a new country and this memoir had me captivated from page one. Add the fact that the author had a leading role in one of my very favourite TV series, All Creatures Great and Small and writes so beautifully about her tiny corner of France and I found I had a book I couldn't put down. While many memoirs about relocation follow the gentle rhythm of life's up and downs, The Olive Farm contrasts the lows of grief, the harshness of fire and storm and the very real possibility of bankruptcy with the joys of a new and intense love, the delicate unfolding of the seasons and a deep respect for the earth and its bounties.
Profile Image for Elise.
78 reviews1 follower
January 11, 2009
For one already in love with Tuscany and food and with an obsession for home improvement The Olive Farm was a somewhat gluttonous experience. In the spirit of Under the Tuscan Sun, the story follows a woman and her partner through the experience of falling in love with a run-down Italian villa, fixing it up, and learning to live in the local community. Not a deep read, but what I needed to get away for awhile and feel some sunshine.
Profile Image for Nanci.
995 reviews27 followers
February 25, 2018
This was a very easy read and while it was a bit sappy, it was a good book to read on a day while feeling "under the weather". The writing is very descriptive, a bit over the top for me, but does accomplish the feeling of mini-vacation to the South of France. Very similar to Under the Tuscan Sun.
Profile Image for C.
176 reviews9 followers
November 9, 2010
Self-indulgent, boring, whiny.
Profile Image for Emma.
590 reviews12 followers
February 28, 2021

This is the book to read if you cannot get away for a summer holiday this year. Carol Drinkwater writes a memoir that is a sumptuous as it is diverting Who has not wanted to move abroad and live from the land? You can feel the sun and smell the sea on every page.

I have always held a little soft spot in my heart for her as the very first Helen Herriot in All creatures Great and Small and this book allows us to follow her and her German born Partner (later Husband) Michel as they take the massive risk to buy a French Olive Farm in the South of France. Their courtship is fresh and very new, but their love and hopefulness spur them on into a situation neither seems fully cognisant of when they arrive with a car filled with mattresses and other bits and bobs from Carol's London home.

Situated in the hills above Canne, Apassionata is as dilapidated and neglected as any place can be and yet, she, Michel and his two teen daughters from his first marriage bowl up there to start work on the place even before a single, tile, shutter or gnarled olive tree is formally theirs. The addition of the morbidly obese pet dog Pamela is an added concern that Carol was also unprepared for. She (Pamela) is ever on the cusp of a cardiac calamity as the heat and her considerable heft see Carol worrying much about the capacious appetites of the greedy pooch.

Carol has passable French, but feels isolated from the girls, insecure in their presence as the true magnitude of the task they have taken on dawns. They have no beds, no experience and most pressing of all in the heat of a Riviera Summer, no water supply.

She is in love with the romantic ideal of a haven for artists and artisans and a writer's garret and so the challenge is to make the reality mould to her mind’s eye.

This is a book about the history of Olives, a book about love and passion and also about the South of France. Taken separately wood make a nice read, but together provide richness and depths to what might have been a formulaic book.

Carol and Michel weather many a calamity both natural and Financial but it is Ms Drinkwater’s skill with description which really lends itself to a book such as thisand I purposefully read the book slowly and with intention , to fully imagine, the sights, sounds and tastes of these first two years at Apassionata and to experience ( by proxy), every glass of wine, every salad, and fish consumed, which are described with a languid but vivid style.

It is obvious why Carol has become such a prolific writer of books and screen works with such a wonderfully rich place to be inspiration and sanctuary from the rigours of the real world. Her use of vocabulary is rich and plummy but still you see her as “one of us” as she struggles with the mundane and the mad.



Her years as a nomadic explorer and seeker are evident in her reference points, but it is the calming affect of her one true love and the place itself that means she finally wants to put down roots and what grounds her.

The trials and tribulations of trying to maintain day jobs whilst a money pit sits on a hill softly beckoning is described with honesty. Things are not always idyllic, but they are always picturesque. Description of flora and fauna is to be expected, but here it is so beautifully transported into my.mind’s eye as to be almost projected.

A cast of helpers and hinderers also pepper the book, all of them interesting; along with a number of canines who make every effort to take up residence in both villa and Carol’s heart. Soon land, people and assumed teenage charges are adapting to Carol and she to them, until a mutually satisfactory equilibrium is settled upon.

I thoroughly enjoyed the book which makes me want to visit the area myself and taste that glorious golden oily elixir from her olives for myself!
Profile Image for Tina Culbertson.
579 reviews19 followers
November 5, 2012
I have long been a fan of Carol Drinkwater. She was my favorite Helen in the series All Creatures Great and Small, and admit I couldn’t warm up to the actress who replaced her after Drinkwater left the series in 1985.

When I read the books, after seeing some of the BBC television shows, it is Carol whom I pictures as Helen. It was her voice I heard when Helen was speaking in those books.

Combining one of my favorite actresses with one of my favorite genres (expatriates-in-paradise genre) it was a sweet treat – finding Drinkwater had penned The Olive Farm. This is the first book in her bestselling trilogy, all of it set on her Provencal olive farm.

Carol met her husband Michel while they were involved in making a movie in Australia . He proposed to her on the first date and they eventually married four years later. Eventually they find this gorgeous ruin of a villa built in 1904, located in Provence . The villa is named Appassionata - meaning passion – and very appropriate for Carol and Michel as they fall heels over ears in love with the place.

"I am in the south of France , gazing at the not-so-distant Mediterranean , falling in love with an abandoned olive farm," Carol Drinkwater writes. "The property, once stylish and now little better than a ruin, is for sale with ten acres of land."

After investing all the money she has they are able to move into their new home, devoid of electricity and water. French law is a different animal altogether from British and American laws as Carol learns while sifting through the endless paperwork and awaiting the many appointments to sign one or two papers. Finally, Appassionata is theirs!

Carol, Michel and his teenaged daughters Clarice and Vanessa arrive one extremely hot afternoon, with the promise of a swim in the pool. Alas….no water and the pool is a pit of sticks and branches. Carol struggles to make it a positive experience and tries to speak her limited French to the girls. The stepdaughters can speak English but make Carol work at communicating. Eventually they are a close knit family along with a number of stray dogs, good friends among the local citizenry.

The experiences she writes about were fancinating to me and she clearly has a better work ethic than I do. Restoring an old villa like that is hard work. HARD work! They uncovered ancient Roman looking steps and tiles. They found some of their olive trees were over 500 years old…..it’s an expat’s dream IF you don’t mind hard work – both physically and culturally.

Eventually Carol took language classes to improve her French and she is, as you may imagine, quite fluent. An engaging book about France , olive harvesting, conquering cultural barriers and love. Above all…love.

If you like the works of Peter Mayle and Frances Mayes I feel certain you would enjoy Carol's musings about Appasionata and her love of southern France.

Profile Image for Heather.
529 reviews4 followers
July 24, 2019
I don't know what why I enjoy reading these types of travelogues/memoirs specifically in the summer, but I do. They give me inspiration for home and garden improvements and enthuse me to do all the things.

This is a memoir about a couple who relocate to France, buy a dilapidated farm, and cultivate an olive crop. The farmhouse is in dire disrepair but other than a mention of sleeping on a mattress on the floor and buying a tiny refrigerator, there was no real mention of renovating it at all. My mind boggled when they bought thousands and thousands of francs worth of plants for the garden rather than fixing the (lack of) roof or the crumbling walls. At one point they had eight guests staying over and the place was filthy and falling down around them, but the garden was near perfect and the swimming pool was up and running so... happy days, haha!

I enjoyed the way this was written. Lots of purple prose and flowery turns of phrase, which I honestly don't mind in books like this. As much as I enjoyed it, I don't think I'll read the others in her little memoir series.
Profile Image for Sally906.
1,398 reviews3 followers
May 16, 2011
Carol Drinkwater, know better to me as the actress who played Mrs Herriot in the TV show, “All Creatures Great and Small,” gives her readers a peek at a couple of years of her life as she and her fiancée pursue a dream of owning, and running an olive farm. A dilapidated and run-down olive farm near Cannes in the south of France. At the time of purchase, Carol’s fiancée, Michael, a French producer, was working out of Paris, while Carol was still acting, mostly in England and Australia. In between earning a living they follow their dream which often meant, for Carol, overnight dashes to the continent between shows.

The book is the first in a series and revolves around the dramas connected to their purchase of the farm and their even more increasingly frantic attempts to tame the farm and renovate the crumbling and insect-infested house with no running water and a leaking roof into a home. Carol and Peter are newly in love, and still starry-eyed, and the property certainly challenges the two of them to work as a team. Is putting their whole life savings down on a dream extreme recklessness or inspired perception?

Carol describes their ups and downs, and there are a lot of downs, some very emotional downs; and also shares with the reader the characters they meet on the way, everyone from the inn owner, the rich old lady from whom they buy the farm and the amazing variety of workers and contractors that help them to fix the place. There are also some very interesting description of olives, and their amazing history.

There are more books in the series which is good because just when it looks like maybe the corner had turned, you still weren’t sure – the story stopped, obviously to be continued….
Profile Image for Mary.
494 reviews58 followers
March 27, 2018
I would actually give this book a 3.5 rating. When will Goodreads allow us to do this?
Carol Drinkwater will go to her grave known as the actress who played James Herriot's girlfriend and wife in the beloved tv series "All Creatures Great and Small". She has actually had a a very varied career, as an actress and a writer.
In "The Olive Farm", the first in a series of books, Carol and her significant other, Michel Noll, German-born television director and producer, decide to purchase a dilapidated olive farm in the hills above Cannes, France. Even though the house, named Apassionata, is almost uninhabitable, with no discernible source for water, Carol and Michel draw on every possible money source to purchase it. They are neophyte part-time homeowners and totally in the dark about how to care for a farm. Many problems arise over the next few years, ranging from a leaky roof to disastrous weather to health issues. But thanks to help from neighbors and friends, they gradually make progress in making this corner of Provence their home. Carol becomes fascinated by the history of the olive tree and weaves this into her story, giving it a sense of grounding in the long history of the region.
If you have enjoyed "Under the Tuscan Sun" by Frances Mayes, or Peter Mayle's "A Good year", you will probably like "The Olive Farm". Many of us fantasize about moving to a beautiful place and starting a new life. Carol Drinkwater shares this adventure, but makes sure the reader understands that even Paradise will have some problems. She is a good storyteller with an eye for detail, but at times the reader just wants to tell her to stop complaining so much.
Profile Image for Chana.
1,603 reviews142 followers
June 3, 2016
Suffers from a bit of idealism, like with all the wonderful meals outside. I've eaten outside and unless the South of France is bereft of the normal wasps and spiders that most of us hate eating with, the meals couldn't be as wonderful as she makes them sound, could they? Maybe she had all the proper plants, citronella candles, etc to drive the buggies away. Never had much success with it myself.
But the idealism also makes the book pleasurable. She seems to be a happy person by nature, an optimist. She is also in love which can make even outdoor eating bearable, maybe. Her optimism runs thick throughout the book.
She and her love Michel buy a tumbledown farm in the South of France. They don't have much money and have quite a lot of finagling to do to make this work. They become Olive Farmers and their success is sweet, even inspiring. Now don't laugh, but after everything I just said about eating outside, I decided my yard really needed work and I wanted to make pleasant sitting and EATING AREAS in my yard. We are having a spate of nice weather in Seattle so I've been weeding and visualizing what kind beautiful yard I might have.
The reading experience was about 3 1/2 stars but because her writing inspired me to work on my own yard and visualize beauty I bumped the score up to a 4. Nice to be inspired, thank you!
Profile Image for Ivana.
624 reviews55 followers
May 6, 2017
Olivová farma je presne ten typ pohodového čítania, ktoré mám rada. Nie príliš náročné, nie príliš divoké, také akurát. Nie je to literárny skvost, je to pohodovka na dovolenku, do apartmánu na terasu s výhľadom na more, kedy sa človek môže aspoň trochu priblížiť tomu, čo takéto knihy sľubujú - vietor vo vlasoch, šum mora v ušiach, slnečné lúče na pleciach, vôňa byliniek v okolí, trošku "maňana" prístupu...

Carol a Michel kúpia polorozpadnutý dom s veľkým pozemkom a olivovými stromami... a o tom to celé je. Podobne ako keď Frances Mayes s manželom kúpili dom v toskánskej Cortone a podobne ako keď Peter Mayle kúpil dom v provensálskom Luberone. Rovnaké a predsa iné.
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