I’d forgotten how much I love autumn. The SP and I took our walk along the river
today as even I am not quite feckless enough to wander through the woods when
bits of tree are whizzing past my nose.
The wind was wild and crazy and the SP went crazy too, leaping like an
impala over the long grass, spooking at things that weren’t there (or at least
not visible to the eye) and leaping up at me as if to say, ‘Isn’t this the best
fun in the entire world ever?’ I had to agree it wasn't half-bad and, with The Black-Eyed Peas blaring in my ears, we danced our way round the big field.
The hedgerows
were stuffed with berries and hips – blackberries, rowanberries, hawthorn, rosehips, big
fat sloes – and the scent of wild honeysuckle drifted on the breeze. And it all reminded me that the wondrous Kim
Jewell had gone a bit nuclear on me the other day. See, many many years ago (so many years in
fact that, as was kindly pointed out on Facebook, most of the original readers
are probably dead!) I wrote a book called The Natural Year, all about living in
tune with the seasons.
Anyhow. I'd
been thinking for quite some time that I really ought to get my old books out there as
e-books. But, to be honest, every time I
started looking into how to do it, I felt a bit queasy. So, I was whinging in an unattractively pathetic way on
Twitter about all the things that were stopping me self-publishing, like lack
of a cover, not being able to format etc, and Kim said simply, ‘I’ll do
it for you.’
And she did. Just
like that. 24 hours later The Natural
Year was up on Amazon and available for sale. I tell ya, that woman is scarily awesome. You wouldn’t want to meet her down a dark
alley, that’s for sure.
Anyhow, here it is and here you go.
It seems I have self-pubbed my first ebook (or rather, Kim has).
You can find it here. if you're in the US and here if you're in the UK. If you're in Germany, you will have to find it for yourself as it seems a direct link is verboten. And if you're anywhere else you are entirely free to buy it from wheresoever you so desire. Kim
interviewed me for her blog and you can read that here. Incidentally you can also find links there to her own wonderful YA titles (James is a huge fan of the Justice series).
Sooo. What did I say, way back then in the mists of time, about Autumm? Let's see....an abridged snippet (love the word snippet).
Autumn – Season of the Mind
"Autumn shouts ‘wake-up’ to the
psyche - it's time to dust yourself off after the languor of summer and take
life head on once again. In spring you started to ask yourself lots of questions about your life,
your path and your desires. Now is the
time to get them going, to take action, to shift your external world. Autumn is the season of the mind but it also
concerns our relationship with the environment, with the world outside, the
bigger picture.
Autumn is a perfect time to decide what you
want to make of your life; what you want to achieve; where you want to be; how
you want to work. It is the key time for
deciding on your life path or making moves towards it. That may sound frightening, even off-putting,
but it needn't be. Often we
automatically find ourselves making changes, shifts, in the autumn. We may not be totally instinctual beings any
more but deep within we are still moved by the rhythms of the year. Our hearts
and souls still beat to the ancient drum.
It is no real surprise that schools and colleges use the beginning of autumn
as their starting point for the academic year.
What better time to make a fresh intellectual start?
This is the perfect time to get
your life in order. It's the time to
start looking for answers to the questions you posed yourself back in spring. If you need to shake your life around a bit,
this is the time to do it. Don't feel
you have to change for the sake of it - it's more a case that if you have been
looking for a change, this is a good time to think about putting things into
motion. As always, if the
time doesn't feel right, don't do anything.
I'm certainly not suggesting that everyone should go out and get a new
job or a new relationship or move house or emigrate on September 1st! Simply that if you feel there are changes in
your life (however small) you might want to make, the energy at this time of
year will help you make those changes.
It's like a car being given a dose of high-octane fuel or a horse being
given a feed of oats - you should be feeling frisky and full of energy."
Hellfire, did I really write that??? Shit. Think I need to read the book. :-)
Oh, and while I’m here, keep an
eye on those rosehips…. A couple of recipes from later in the book...
Wild rose hips abound during the
autumn and early days of winter - pick them (best after the second frost but
before the birds get a chance to eat them all) and use them as a cold-banishing
tonic, jam-packed with vitamin C. If you
have an abundance of rose hips you could make rosehip syrup as did all wisewomen
and good housekeepers of old. If not,
try a simple tonic drink. The famous
herbalist Culpeper said that rosehips are ‘grateful to the taste and a
considerable restorative, fitly given to the consumptive person, the conserve
being proper in all distempers of the breast and in coughs and tickling
rheums. It has a binding effect and
helps digestion.’ In all a wonderful
free tonic.
ROSEHIP
SYRUP
Crush around 450g of rose hips
and put them into a pan containing 900ml of boiling water. Bring them back to the boil and then turn off
the heat and allow them to stand for around twenty minutes. Strain (preferably through muslin), and then
put the fruit which will now be pappy and mashed, into around 300ml of fresh
boiling water. Once again allow to stand
for a further twenty minutes and then strain again.
Mix the two sets of strained
juices together and return to the pan.
Boil on a low but steady heat until the juice has reduced down to around
600ml. It will be syrupy by now. Allow to cool, sweeten to taste with wild
honey and bottle in sterilized bottles as you would with any preserve.
ROSEHIP
TONIC DRINK
Simply chop up two teaspoons of
rose hips and add them to around 300ml of boiling water. Allow to steep for fifteen minutes and then
strain and sweeten with honey to taste.
You can make larger quantities and keep in the fridge for up to three
days. It tastes lovely too.
6 comments:
Hello Jane. Thrilled to see your book on kindle, when will Spirit of the Home be available? That is my favourite book EVER
Oh wow...thank you, Gina. I'm working on getting the rights back on Spirit of the Home - but will be putting up the little spin-offs soon (Spirit of the Bedroom etc). :)
Do you, by any chance, have a good recipe for rose hip jam? That's supposed to be very good for a body with lots of vitamin C.
I loved your description of what Autumn is good for. I happen to feel the same way and am already busy implementing change.
Thanks for adding that bit to this post.
XOX
You know, I was going to say you're wrong - this doesn't work in Oz. But it does. In Autumn the heat is there but the winds settle. And like you, the kids go back to school. There might be some scorchers yet to come, but the world's starting to turn. The cooler weather is out there, somewhere on the horizon. Yeah.
Nora - I'll look into it - sounds like a lovely idea...
Greta - you know, this bothered me after I'd first published this; how it works or doesn't work in the opposite hemisphere.. but people seem to be able to work with it...the seasons are kinda okay, maybe just not the months...
Love Autumn too - but where was Summer this year? Love Spring, but summer..... it never really came hereabouts, anywa.
Post a Comment