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The Gentle Art of Domesticity

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The Gentle Art of Domesticity
by: Jane Brocket

 : The Gentle Art of Domesticity

List Price: £14.99
Amazon.co.uk's Price: £9.89
You Save: £5.10 (34%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Not yet published



This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Paperback
EAN: 9780340952320
ISBN: 0340952326
Label: Hodder & Stoughton
Manufacturer: Hodder & Stoughton
Number Of Pages: 256
Publication Date: February 19, 2009
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Studio: Hodder & Stoughton




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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Artful but not very domestic
I was so glad that I ordered this from the library and only invested 40p in reading it. It is a beautiful, colourful book - very nice for looking at on a rainy day once or twice, but it is so intensely personal, so smuggly middle class, so incredibly and annoyingly like a blog between hardcovers that I was astonished any publisher had wanted to pay good money for it.

Mrs Brocket has been very clever to get so many people falling over themselves to look at handknitted socks on her children's feet, her holiday snaps, a list of dvds she likes to watch and some garish sweeties.

For women without years of experience cooking and knitting the bok is no help. It is easy to re-create a Janeish life with enough time and money, but for the rest of us, this book is no help. I recommend reading blogs - so many women out there are sharing lovely photos, recipes, crafts and inspiration freely for the love of it. You don't even need to invest 40p



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - gentle art of disappointment
This books looks so scrumptious! I guess I was expecting the answers to all my 1950 housewife's dreams. But no. There are a few recipes and that's it. No how tos, no patterns, no much. What I got from it is how lovely (and oh so slighty smug) the author is with her lovely house and lovely life and lovely collection of crinoline ladies.

However, the book is very beautiful to look at.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A rare treat
Read this book if you want to revel in a world of home comforts, colour and simple pleasures. Jane writes beautifully and articulates what many women feel about being at home and the whole range of domestic activities - but perhaps find it hard to express. If you want a practical craft book, as a couple of these reviewers seem to, there are hundreds you can buy. This is not what Jane Brocket is offering - and thank goodness she isn't.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A gentle read, not a DIY manual

I adored this book. In fact I'm still reading it. This is a lazy sunday afternoon book that you want to indulge yourself. I pick it up and put it down and just flick through the pictures or just read a chapter out of order if I fancy.
It is full of wonderful colouful pictures of snuggly quilts and socks that makes me a) want to go make them and b) snuggle in them whilst reading this book.
A lot of people are disapointed by the lack of instruction in the book but I get bored with instruction and lust after beautiful inspirational pictures and musings. I would save this book from a housefire!!



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Blog into book doesn't work
I was looking forward to the book as I had frequently visited the blog and enjoyed the photographs...however when I started the book I realised a blog doesn't translate into a book. While a blog is a diary (of sorts), a book is a much more concrete and lasting evidence of one's literary efforts (that cannot be changed, once commited to print). These two concepts somehow clash in the book, giving us a picture and a commentary on privilege and choice (someone else made that comment but I hope they don't mind me using it here). Domesticity is not an art, it's a job, and if we're lucky or priviledged enough we may make pretty things out of beautiful, expensive yarns and beautiful, expensive fabrics!

The term used in the title is repeated so often through the book, it became very annoying and lost the meaning altogether. I must confess that I didn't finish the book, I looked at the pictures and flicked through the last 70-odd pages, but the book just became more of the same to me - rather simplistic and self-centred. I do appreciate the fact that all literary output IS, in fact, subjective, but there could have been a balance somewhere there; so maybe the title of the book should have been "The gentle art of domesticity according to me".

I , too, knit, crochet, sew, quilt, bake, try my hand at different crafts, as this is what they are. They probably amount to domesticity, but I wouldn't call them art.

The 2 points I give the book are for the photographs - very good for a coffee table type book.




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