Alas Poor Johnny: A Memoir of Life on an Exmoor Farm

Alas Poor Johnny: A Memoir of Life on an Exmoor Farm

by Boris Johnson (Foreword), Birdie Johnson (Editor), Boris Johnson (Foreword), Birdie Johnson (Editor), Buster Johnson (Author)

Synopsis

In 1951 Buster Johnson moved from Surrey to Exmoor with her husband Johnny, four children, a couple of dogs and a vanload of pigs and poultry. Naturally gregarious, she exchanges a life of domestic servants and bridge parties for a remote and spartan existence at West Nethercote, a farm in the heart of Exmoor national park. Alas Poor Johnny, written some ten years later, is her vivid and fascinating account of their life there, and of farming on Exmoor in the fifties, told with a strong sense of drama and of the absurd. The void left by her lost cultural and social pursuits becomes filled by the minutiae of everyday life, and by her husband Johnny and their four children. Above all, it is filled by the animals. These take the place of absent friends in her affections, their personalities permeating the book. There is a small but strong supporting cast, including busybody Mrs Stevens at the next door farm; Arthur the ex-cowman who moves with them from Surrey; SRN Tommie, the butt of an aggressive ram - and Alby the rabbit catcher, who plays the mouth organ and dances wild dances, enchanting the children. Finally, threading through all this with a glint of steel, is Johnny. He is her antithesis; strong and undemonstrative, generally preferring animals to people. Their relationship is the heart of the book. Alas Poor Johnny is a first-hand account of life on a farm in the 1950s, written at the time but reading with the freshness of the present. It will appeal to anyone, whether interested in Exmoor and old farming practices, a lover of the countryside and of animals, or just wanting to cheer themselves up with a good story, well told. It is a delight to read, hugely funny and, at times, touching. Buster and Johnny spent the rest of their lives at Nethercote. She died in 1987, without ever publishing her book. Her daughter Birdie, who herself lived there for many years, has now done so on her behalf. Boris Johnson, Buster's grandson, has written a foreword.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 232
Publisher: Matador
Published: 20 Mar 2015

ISBN 10: 178462182X
ISBN 13: 9781784621827

Media Reviews
`Buster Johnson came by accident to the long, low farmhouse called West Nethercote and decided never to leave. Her evocative memories gather together an array of family and neighbours, plagues of rabbits, a mutinous ram and the shepherd calling to his dog from across an Exmoor valley. She vividly describes a way of life that was already passing away. Alas Poor Johnny is a splendid book. It deserves to be widely read.' -- Tom Mayberry * South West Heritage Trust *
'Alas Poor Johnny is one of the most remarkable accounts of highly rural life ever written in this mainly rural region.' -- Martin Hesp
'In Alas Poor Johnny Buster Johnson brilliantly juxtaposes her cosseted, comfortable life as a child and the stark reality of life on Exmoor. The book conveys a real sense of Exmoor character - a mix of warmth and humour, but with an underlying toughness and, yes, indifference sometimes. Reading it brought back unexpected memories of my own childhood. The final chapter, in which Johnny fixes up a real Heath Robinson affair of stirrup and wire so they can turn the lights off from the bathroom without having to go out to the engine shed, had me nearly crying with laughter. It is a fitting end to an amazing story.' -- Nigel Hester * Exmoor *
'Buster Johnson came to Exmoor by accident and never left. Her story is funny and touching and underpinned with a steely resolve to make the best of things. It's Cold Comfort Farm written with love. Enjoy.' -- Tony James
Author Bio
Irene Johnson (known as Buster) was born at Versailles in 1907, to a French mother and English father. She was 29 when she married Johnny, swapping her cultured upper middle class life for one of frequent chaos and uncertainty. In 1951 they moved with their young family to Nethercote, a remote farm in the heart of Exmoor. They were still living there when they died; Buster in 1987, Johnny in 1992. Alas Poor Johnny has been edited by Birdie Johnson, the youngest of Buster and Johnny's four children. She spent a large part of her life at Nethercote, the family farm. In 2002 she produced the Exmoor Oral History Archive and, with photographer Mark Rattenbury, co-authored Reflections: Life Portraits of Exmoor, the book of the archive. She moved to the High Weald of East Sussex in 2009, where the landscape serves as a replacement for the Exmoor she left behind.