Page i All Things Herriot Page ii James Alfred Wight (James Herriot) treating a horse. Courtesy Northern Echo Page iii All Things Herriot James Herriot and His Peaceable Kingdom Sanford Sternlicht Page iv Copyright © 1995 by Syracuse University Press Syracuse, New York 132445160 All Rights Reserved First Paperback Edition 1999 99 00 01 02 03 04 6 5 4 3 2 1 The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.481984. Library of Congress CataloginginPublication Data Sternlicht, Sanford V. All things Herriot : James Herriot and his peaceable kingdom / Sanford Sternlicht. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 0815603223 (cl) — ISBN 0815606117 (pbk. alk. paper) 1. Herriot, James. 2. Herriot, James—Influence. 3. Popular culture. I. Title. SF613.H44S74 1995 636.089'092—dc20 9439523 Manufactured in the United States of America Page v To Joan Eyeington of York, my friend for thirty years; and to the memory of my friend Dave Eyeington (1892–1990), joiner of York, and once corporal, Fifth Battalion, West York shire Regiment, France, 1915–1918. Page vi Sanford Sternlicht is parttime professor of English at Syracuse University and a poet, critic, and theater director. His works of criticism include John Webster's Imagery and the Webster Canon (1972), John Masefield (1977), C. S. Forester (1981), Padraic Colum (1985), John Galsworthy (1987), R. F. Delderfield (1988), and Stevie Smith (1990). He has edited Selected Short Stories of Padraic Colum (1985), Selected Plays of Padraic Colum (1986), Selected Poems of Padraic Colum (1989), and In Search of Stevie Smith (1991) for Syracuse University Press. Page vii Contents Illustrations ix Preface xi 1. The Prince of the Peaceable Kingdom 1 2. The Herriot Mystique 18 3. All Creatures Great and Small 25 4. All Things Bright and Beautiful 56 5. All Things Wise and Wonderful 78 6. The Lord God Made Them All 97 7. Every Living Thing 116 8. James Herriot's Yorkshire 137 9. The Best of James Herriot, James Herriot's Dog Stories, and Juvenile 146 Books 10. All Things Herriot 155 Chronology 163 Notes 165 Selected Bibliography: James Herriot 169 Index 171 Page ix Illustrations James Alfred Wight (James Herriot) treating a horse frontispiece following page 96 1. Sinclair's & Wight's veterinary surgery 2. Wight autographing books 3. Roulston Scar and Hood Hill, Herriot territory 4. Wight with fans 5. Wight, at the Parish Church of St. Mary's 6. Christopher Timothy as Herriot and friend 7. Yorkshire pig 8. Sheep in Newtondale 9. Christopher Timothy treating a bovine patient Page xi Preface Millions of people, young and old, the world over, love James Herriot. He is their friend. They feel they know him as one might know an uncle or a neighbor. They wish they had a doctor like him, one who really cares and makes house calls. They are more familiar with "his" life than they are with the lives of their political leaders. I have placed quotation marks around the word his because there was no retired Yorkshire veterinarian and writer named James Herriot. The name is a nom de plume. It is also safe to say that no one improbably named Siegfried Farnon ever lived. The true author, James Alfred Wight, was a retired veterinarian and active writer, who died in 1995. How James Herriot came into being and how the "memoirs" of that constructed narrator, through crossfertilization, became a darling of popular culture and a multimedia financial milk herd are two of the subjects of this book. The third subject is an appreciation of a fine literary craftsman, "Alf" Wight, who has shaped the material of his ordinary, useful, relatively uneventful life in the north of England during the middle of the twentieth century into a series of engrossing books that have given great pleasure to vast numbers of people and have helped the cause of respect for, and kind treatment of, animals more than any other artistic endeavor since Walt Disney's Bambi.
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