




Buy All Things Wise and Wonderful (All Creatures Great and Small) on desertcart.com ✓ FREE SHIPPING on qualified orders Review: Great Book! - Great read! Highly recommend Review: Love the stories - I'm a big fan of James Herriot from his first book reading very late and laughing out loud at his first experiences and getting to adjust to people and his practice. So much fun sharing his stories. 😂.
| Best Sellers Rank | #43,993 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #21 in Animal & Pet Care Essays #68 in Television Performer Biographies #265 in Memoirs (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (8,916) |
| Dimensions | 5.56 x 1.12 x 8.3 inches |
| Edition | Reissue |
| ISBN-10 | 1250063493 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1250063496 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 448 pages |
| Publication date | February 3, 2015 |
| Publisher | Griffin |
S**K
Great Book!
Great read! Highly recommend
C**M
Love the stories
I'm a big fan of James Herriot from his first book reading very late and laughing out loud at his first experiences and getting to adjust to people and his practice. So much fun sharing his stories. 😂.
K**R
Always a treat
Yes, you probably know "All Creatures Great and Small." This continues the story. Funny and heartbreaking at the same time.
J**H
A wise and wonderful book in many ways
To all who love many human beings and also who love animals, James Herriot's books are for you. He writes warmly, compassionately, with humor, and very intelligently about his life in northern England as a veterinarian. In this book, he starts off with his joining the RAF and bits of what he went through in his training. But the actual focus of this book, as the reader comes to see, are that his RAF training and the people he meets during this time, remind him of past veterinary experiences and one is then plunged into his wonderful stories of life with his animal patients and their owners. The book is delightful, written with a serenity not often found these days. His patients don't always get well, but mostly they do, and his intelligence, veterinary knowledge and skill, and particularly his creativity in putting facts together for his diagnoses is astonishing. I have heard people say that the story is too slow-moving. I say to them that they should put away their prejudices and look into this delightful, deeply compassionate and often funny, well-written, sensitive series of true stories.
D**L
More Warm and Wonderful Stories by a Lovable Vet
The only difference between this book and Herriot's others is that he has to cover more ground. He's flitting back and forth between his World War II experiences in the RAF and more of his experiences in the Yorkshire countryside with his beloved farm animals and some domestic animals. This made for a very complete autobiography. I found the story of his first solo flight to be very interesting. I think that there seem to be more people stories in this one than in the others, and some of them are sad, poignant stories. I think I have become addicted to Herriot's style of writing in his other books where he will provide us with stories of his day-to-day experiences with the animals and their owners. The effect is more immediate--he tells how the phone awakens him in the night and every detail of what happens when he reaches the side of the animal who is in labor or in pain or distress of some sort. Never what you would call a true animal lover, I have found that these stories put me in another place--they make me feel compassion for the animals (and their owners). Whereas, in this book he will tell rather typical military stories and then write that he is reminded of the time when he had to go out to a farm and nurse a certain animal back to health. We still get many of the stories which we have learned to crave from our warm and compassionate veterinarian, but the effect isn't as focused. It's still a very good book, but I will say that there were times when his people stories, whether military or civilian, dragged a little for me. I'd find myself eager to return to his animal world. This is where he shines--when describing both the farm animals and the domestic animals whom he treated and, in many cases, learned to love. I'm very glad that I read this book. I learned more about his multi-faceted life (it was good to get to know his wife better too). I highly recommend the book. Who knew that I, a 66-year-old lady who has kept her distance from animals her whole life, would become so addicted to Herriot's charming animal stories. In a way they read like a series of short mystery stories. The reader, instead of trying to figure out the perpetrator of a crime, is trying to figure out with Herriot, the cause of an animal's health problem. His books make for fascinating reading, and I'm proof that one doesn't have to be a lifelong animal lover to love these books.
L**E
attn: animal lovers
Wonderfully written stories of Scottish vet's life and adventures treating the farm animals and pets he encountered in England. All four books are worth reading two and three times.
D**H
Wonderful book!
This is the third time I’ve read this book and each time I love it more and never want it to end. Such wonderful stories of the countryside and the young vet who looked after the animals there. I’ll never tire of James Herriot books and neither will you so treat yourself to these great stories !
M**I
A vet in RAF
I always love Herriot's books but this was special. Showing readers a bit of what RAF training was like during WWII was a bonus, and I could get the homesickness that any soldier might have felt. Yet 'his' animals still filed his mind and heart, which is the joy to read.
A**A
My love for animals was rekindled after reading James Herriot. I have bought most of his books and often read them again and again.
B**E
The comments as for the other four books by this wonderful author apply. I just adore his stile and facinating manner, his ability to make the people and animals as well as the way of life in Yorkshire in the early 20th century come alive..
T**R
Without the technical medical words I would guess this book would be TOEIC 650 ish. If you're not a native reader you'll need a good dictionary to get through the series with the occasional veterinary words. Nice short anecdote from niceland.
J**J
James Herriot stories are the best. Wonderful narratives about his life and experiences as a vet in northern England. This is the second book in the series.
S**E
easy read
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