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Counting My Chickens and Other Home Thoughts - Inspirational Book for Cozy Reading | Perfect for Relaxation & Home Decor
Counting My Chickens and Other Home Thoughts - Inspirational Book for Cozy Reading | Perfect for Relaxation & Home Decor

Counting My Chickens and Other Home Thoughts - Inspirational Book for Cozy Reading | Perfect for Relaxation & Home Decor

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Description

Gathered from the author's personal diaries, the memoirs of the youngest Mitford sibling discuss such topics as the challenges of running Chatsworth, her childhood of Mitford, and her celebrity relationships. 20,000 first printing.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Counting My Chickens is a collection of newspaper and magazine columns by Deborah Freeman-Mitford Cavendish, the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire. "Debo" is the youngest and only surviving Mitford Girl, the fabulous daughters of Lord and Lady Redesdale who scandalized and delighted the British and the world from the 1930s onward.Although this is a very short book cut into many small, fairly unconnected segments, there is nevertheless much that charms. The celebrated Mitford wit,most clearly displayed by Debo's sisters Nancy and Jessica, is in evidence, particularly in the sections that deal with Debo's childhood and early adult years (she once traveled by train from Scotland with a goat, milking it in first class waiting rooms on the way.)Also in evidence is the extraordinariness of Debo's life as wife of a Duke and as chatelaine of one of England's great mansions, Chatsworth House. She casually drops names like Harold Macmillan and John Kennedy (both of whom were indirectly related to her husband) and at the same time records some of the merriments and aggravations that come with having your home on display to tourists several months each year. Occasionally Debo will drop a barbed comment or two on the silliness of some politicians and visitors, but for the most part she is soft spoken and accomodating.Few Duchesses have written or revealed much about their lives, so its nice that one has done so now, at a time when the House of Lords is being democratized and the aristocracy must seem more anachronistic than ever.