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"Well, Betty MacDonald has done it again. Here is the merriest, maddest book of the year . . . with that fabulour MacDonald sparkle in every line of its fascinating pages." Marge Lyon, Chicago Sunday Tribune, August 27, 1950. The Narrator: We are incredibly fortunate to have the award winning Heather Henderson narrating Betty MacDonald's wonderful memoirs. Heather's warm voice, knack for characterizations and engagement with Betty MacDonald's writing equal a superb listening experience. And we're not the only one's who have noticed. Henderson was a finalist in the 2015 Voice Arts Awards for her narration of The Egg and I, and a UK audible customer wrote: "Not a reader I had come across but she is amazing - she brings out the fact that Betty was brought up to be a lady which makes her misadventures and tribulations even funnier - imagine Margo from The Good Life suddenly finding herself running a chicken farm! The characterization is vivid without being cartoonish, her pronunciation of certain words is (to my English ears) delightful and you can tell she is having a ball reading this book and is delighted to share it with you! Her reading is heartfelt, droll and wry. As Juliet Stevenson is to Jane Austen on audio so Heather Henderson is to Betty MacDonald - and there is no higher praise!" Indeed! The Audiobook: Comedy is probably not the first thing that springs to mind when we recall the Great Depression, but when Betty MacDonald recounted her experiences of that "hard" and "dreary" era in Anybody Can Do Anything, she found lots to laugh about. Chronologically, this book takes place after her misadventures on a chicken ranch - the subject of Betty's first book, The Egg and I - and before her account of a year spent in a tuberculosis sanatorium, recounted in The Plague and I (both of which are also available in audio from Post Hypnotic Press). Despite the hilarity with which she described her time spent chicken farming, she was unhappy in her marriage and terribly lonely. Anybody Can Do Anything opens with her leaving the farm and her husband and making her way with her two children back to Seattle and the bosom of her family, just as the Depression begins. She and her family - a mother, a brother, and three sisters, plus her two young girls - live in a "modest dwelling in a respectable neighborhood, near good schools and adequate for a normal family." As the Depression goes on, they find much comfort in having that home and in having each other to rely on and commiserate with. With two children to support, Betty was desperate for work as jobs became more and more scarce. But she also had her sister, Mary, an eccentric and energetic finder of jobs and organizer of people. Since childhood, Mary had been getting Betty in and out of situations. With Mary's 'can do' attitude, Betty was propelled into jobs and sent on dates, regardless of whether she possessed the skills necessary for the job or had anything in common with her date. Betty credits Mary's positive attitude with getting them through the hard years: "Mary, one of those fortunate people who are able to bring forth great reserves of strength and fortitude during times of stress, accepted the Depression as a personal challenge. She always had a job, she tried to find jobs for her family and hundreds of friends, and while she was looking propped up everyone's limp spirits by defying big corporations. When the telephone company threatened to cut off our telephone because the bill hadn't been paid, Mary marched right down to see the president and told him that if he cut off our phone and left us with no communication with the outside world, she was going to sue him personally.... "I told him a telephone and telegraph company is a public service operating under a special grant from the State. If you cut off my telephone, you will not be performing a public service and I will sue you."" While successful with the phone company, this tactic didn't work when it came to their heat and the electricity, and they find themselves relying on old Christmas candles for light and firewood for heat: "When we ran out of fireplace wood, Mary unearthed a bucksaw and marched us all down to a city park two blocks away, where we took turns sawing up fallen logs." Betty's writing is a testament to the power of humor to help cope with adversity, and her humor also afforded her opportunities to comment on larger issues. As the Depression grinds on, she notes: "Now I grew more and more conscious of the aimlessness and sadness of the people on the streets, of the Space for Rent signs, marking the sudden death of businesses, that had sprung up over the city like white crosses on the battlefield and I lifted myself up each morning timidly and with dread." She doesn't desert her boss, Mr. Chalmers, even though his business is clearly failing. She intends to stay until the end. "And I did," we read, "in spite of Mr. Chalmers' telling me many times that the Depression was all my fault, the direct result of inferior people like me wearing silk stockings and thinking they were as good as people like him." And have we not heard this victim blaming rhetoric after every economic crisis, including the crash of 2008? Some of the sentiments and words Betty uses are, arguably, dated and not politically correct. Still, they afford us an interesting window into our recent past and a glimpse of what life was like before the various civil rights movements, women's rights, and political correctness. Betty is worth listening to just for the sheer entertainment value she provides - a wonderful combination of beautiful writing and laugh-out-loud humor - and for those who want more, her reflections can teach us much about coping with adversity.
Betty MacDonald, Betty Macdonald (Author), Heather Henderson (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Plague and I: Betty MacDonald's second humorous memoir
Thanks to vaccines, tuberculosis is rare in North America today and, thanks to antibiotics, relatively treatable. This wasn't the case in 1938, when Betty MacDonald was diagnosed. "Perhaps the funniest book I've ever read. But then each time I read The Egg And I, I think the same thing. Both make me snort out loud. I laugh until I weep..." Mrs. Meers, Goodreads, 2008 (print edition). It was more common and often deadly. The only hope for a cure was treatment in a sanitorium, which was costly. For those who couldn't afford it, there were public facilities with long wait lists. It was into one of these, Firland Sanitorium (The Pines in The Plague and I), that Betty MacDonald was lucky enough to go in 1938. With the same abundant wry humor and keen observation of people that made her first book, The Egg and I, so immensly popular, MacDonald describes life at The Pines. Her account of her year there is a rare look at a kind of medicine no longer practiced by a rare writer: one of the premiere memoirists of her era, ... one of the first Seattleites to achieve world-wide recognition, and ... a gifted writer who was able to translate her difficult - even grim - life experiences into books whose biting humor and vivid storytelling strikes readers ... both hilarious and reassuring. (Paula Becker, hisotryling.org)
Betty MacDonald, Betty Macdonald (Author), Heather Henderson (Narrator)
Audiobook
"The Egg and I" took first America by storm in 1945, selling over 1,000,000 within ten months of it's original publication. Betty MacDonald's first book about her adventures as a young wife on a chicken farm on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state was a breath of fresh air to a world that, in the wake of WWII, sorely needed it. Betty lived with her first husband near Chimacum, Washington - a newlywed doing her best to adjust to and help operate their small chicken farm, from 1927 to 1931. MacDonald was a keen observer of the people around her, and she calls a spade a spade, "and there were a plenty of spades." The Egg and I was adapted for stage, radio and screen, with the movie version starring Claudette Colbert and Fred MacMurray. The movie version also introduced the world to Ma and Pa Kettle, the eccentric country bumpkins portrayed by the inimitable Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride, who were so popular that a string of spin-off movies was made about their adventures. Betty MacDonald wrote three other memoirs, as well as the still popular Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle series for children, and is recognized by many as an important America humorist. In her MA thesis, The Egg and Us: Contextualization and Historicization (2014), Samantha Hoekstra writes: "Some scholars credit MacDonald with having inspired Shirley Jackson, Erma Bombeck, and other purveyors of domestic humor, but perhaps the most appropriate inheritor of the MacDonald tradition is the contemporary writer David Sedaris. ... One of the most significant similarities is that the lack of conventionality in both families is presented as normal and worthy of respect. Even as they make fun of their families' foibles, the authors convey an undeniable warmth, affection, and acceptance. In a sense, they challenge the very notion of a 'normal' American family." This is why MacDonald's writing is still relevant and funny today.
Betty MacDonald (Author), Heather Henderson (Narrator)
Audiobook
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle loves everyone, and everyone loves her right back. The Children love her because she is lots of fun. Their parents love her because she can cure children of absolutely any bad habit. The treatments are unusual, but they work! Who better than a pig, for instance, to teach a piggy little boy table manners? And what better way to cure the rainy-day "waddle-I-do's" than hunt for pirate treasure in Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's upside-down house? "Each of these stories has obviously been told over and over to delighted children, who must throng around their author as the youngsters in the book do around Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle herself." - The Chicago Tribune
Betty MacDonald (Author), Karen White (Narrator)
Audiobook
Happy Birthday, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle is back with a brand-new bundle of wonderfully magical cures for any bad habit—from watching too much TV to picky eating to fear of trying new things. With a little help from her pets, Wag the dog, Lightfoot the cat, and Lester the pig—and a trunk full of magnificent powders and potions—she can solve any problem, big or small. And while Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle is working her magic, the children are working some of their own, planning a boisterous birthday bash for everyone's favorite problem solver!
Betty MacDonald (Author), Karen White, Unknown (Narrator)
Audiobook
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle lives in an upside-down house and smells like cookies. She was even married to a pirate once. Most of all, she knows everything about children. She can cure them of any ailment. Patsy hates baths. Hubert never puts anything away. Allen eats v-e-r-y slowly. Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle has a treatment for all of them.
Betty MacDonald (Author), Karen White (Narrator)
Audiobook
Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle lives in an upside-down house and smells like cookies. She was even married to a pirate once. Most of all, she knows everything about children. She can cure them of any ailment. Patsy hates baths. Hubert never puts anything away. Allen eats v-e-r-y slowly. Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle has a treatment for all of them.
Betty MacDonald (Author), Karen White (Narrator)
Audiobook
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