Every Living Thing James Herriot



Many of Herriot’s works—including All Creatures Great and Small, All Things Bright and Beautiful, All Things Wise and Wonderful, The Lord God Made Them All, and Every Living Thing—became international bestsellers and have been adapted for film and television. James Herriot has captivated millions of readers and television viewers with tales of the triumphs, disasters, pride and sometimes heartache that filled his life as a vet in the Yorkshire Dales. 'Every Living Thing' shines with the captivating storytelling that has made James Herriot a favourite the world over. EVERY LIVING THING is the last book in the series. I read the third book in the series first and loved it so much that I grabbed EVERY LIVING THING when I found it on the shelf in a used bookstore. This book, too, is wonderful. Each chapter of the books in this series contains a separate incident, an example from Herriot's everyday life.

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Publication Order of All Creatures Great and Small Books

If Only They Could Talk (1970)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
All Creatures Great and Small (1972)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet (1972)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Let Sleeping Vets Lie (1973)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Vet in Harness (1974)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
All Things Bright and Beautiful (1974)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Vets Might Fly (1976)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
All Things Wise and Wonderful (1976)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
The Lord God Made Them All (1981)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Vet in a Spin (1984)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Every Living Thing James Herriot

Publication Order of Smudge Books

Smudge, The Little Lost Lamb (1991)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Smudge's Day Out (1991)Amazon.de | Amazon.com

Publication Order of Short Story Collections

The Best of James Herriot (1983)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Horse & Pony Stories (1986)Amazon.de | Amazon.com

Publication Order of Picture Books

Bonny's Big Day (1972)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Moses the Kitten (1984)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Only One Woof (1985)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
The Christmas Day Kitten (1986)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Blossom Comes Home (1988)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
The Market Square Dog (1989)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Oscar, Cat-About-Town (1990)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
The Animals at Diamond Woods (2009)Amazon.de | Amazon.com

Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books

Animal Stories, Tame & Wild (1979)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Yorkshire (1979)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
All Creatures Great and Small Annual 1982 (1981)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Favorite Dog Stories (1986)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Dog Stories (1986)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Greatest Cat Stories (1989)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot Story Book (1992)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Every Living Thing (1992)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Treasury for Children (1992)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Cat Stories (1994)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Lord God Made Them All (1994)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Seven Yorkshire tales (1995)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Yorkshire Stories (1995)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Yorkshire Village (1995)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Animal Stories (1997)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Yorkshire Stories (1998)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
James Herriot's Yorkshire Revisited (1999)Amazon.de | Amazon.com

Publication Order of Anthologies

Famous and Curious Animal Stories(1989)Amazon.de | Amazon.com
Christmas Cats(2005)Amazon.de | Amazon.com

James Herriot was born James Alfred Wight on February 1916; a British veterinary surgeon whose numerous years in his field prepared him for a writing career during which he told many a story about animals and their owners, James Herriot died in 1995.

Biography

Born in Sunderland, County Durham, James Herriot was the son of James and Hannah Bell Wight. While James took work as a ship plater, he also indulged his passion of the piano, his wife earning a small income as a dress maker, on top of her singing.

Attending Yoker primary school and Hillhead High School, Herriot gained a passion for football at an early age, becoming a lifetime supporter of the Sunderland Football club.

He entered the veterinary filed at the age of 23, having received his qualifications from Glasgow veterinary college in 1939. Initially practicing in Sunderland, James Herriot eventually moved to a rural area in the town of Thirsk, and there he stayed for the remainder of his life.

James Herriot married Joan Catherine Anderson Danbury in 1941. They had two children; James Alexander not only entered the veterinarian business but also joined his father as a partner in his practice, while Rosemary became a general practice physician.

James Herriot briefly served in the military and eventually attested, even then, to have held a passion for writing, a dream than never came to fruition because so much of his time was consumed by his family and business.

Every Living Thing James Herriot

It was his wife, Joan, who finally pushed him to pursue his dream; despite his enthusiasm, Herriot’s initial attempts at writing were met with rejection and often revolved around football.

It wasn’t until he turned his eye towards what he knew best, animals, that James Herriot began to experience success; it was after he observed the potential for success that his first novel ‘If only they could talk’ presented that James decided to drop the name Wight in favor of his pen name ‘James Herriot’, this resulting from common etiquette at the time which frowned upon the concept of professionals in most businesses advertising their services.

James Herriot was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1991 and died four years later; Joan, his wife, also died in 1999.

Writing Career

Many of James Herriot’s books are partially autobiographical and will tell stories that loosely incorporate events, people and places connected to his own life, many times in a personal manner.

Every Living Thing James Herriot Audiobook

The books, in many ways, chronicle the shift the veterinary industry underwent during James’ years in his practice, taking into account the role transitions in agriculture as well as various social factors might have played in the process, this including the fact that many a veterinary practice slowly but steadily shifted their primary focus away from large beasts of burden to smaller creatures like dogs and cats.

While his books are largely referred to as animal stories, the creatures in James Herriot’s novels often play a fairly negligible role, with the plots primarily revolving around the people of Yorkshire country and their lives. The unique flavor present in Herriot’s work often emanates from the emphasis he places upon the relationships between animals and their owner, with the author known for making shrewd and quirky observations about this human/animal dynamic.

James Herriot’s books were adapted into a movie titled ‘All Creatures Great and Small’ in 1975, as well as a long running series of the same name which aired on BBC Television. The BBC also developed a three part drama in 2010 titled ‘Young James Herriot’ which utilized case notes and diaries to tell the story of the author.

Herriot’s home of Thirsk has benefited greatly from his popularity, with the ‘World of James Herriot’ Museum attracting many a curious fan.

If Only They Could Talk

Every Living Thing James Herriot

James Herriot arrives in the small village of Darrowby, unaware of the adventures that await him or the new friends that lie ahead. ‘If Only They Could Talk’ is a memoir narrating James Herriot’s first few years as a vet; operating in the country, ‘If Only They Could Talk’ manifests James Wight’s unique storytelling magic, the novel providing several hours of fun and joy to those persons that enjoy the company of animals and wish to explore the wild places of the country side.

James Herriot And Helen

‘If Only they could talk’ is an elegantly written novel that is often forgotten by today’s readers; there is never a dull moment within its pages. The characters are eccentric and the narrative couldn’t be any more humorous. Many natives of the region within which the novel is set have often complimented James’ first book for the sense of homeliness it creates

It shouldn’t happen to a Vet

The title aptly describes the spirit of James Herriot’s the second novel, which finds the author’s primary character, at one point, sitting on a high Yorkshire Moor and oddly scented like a cow.

‘It shouldn’t happen to a Vet’ continues to tell many more stories about Herriot’s complicated life, roping his boss Siegfried Farnon and the unpredictability that is his personality into the chaos, along with Tristan, his charming brother, complimented by Herriot’s fated encounter with the beautiful Helen.

Once more the beauty of the countryside shines through in this warm tale that is as charming as it is wise. ‘It shouldn’t happen to a vet’, like all of James Herriot’s works, is one novel that shouldn’t be rushed.

James Herriot doesn’t write fast paced page turners filled with thrilling tales; rather it is those readers that enjoy the quite simplicity of a good book that Herriot writes for, his second novel simply happy to crawl down its own path, rarely in a hurry to arrive at its destination but making every portion of the journey a true delight.

James’ anecdotes about the life of a vet in the country illustrate a love for the quite life; they reveal wisdom and wit even while never failing to entertain. ‘It shouldn’t happen to a vet’ has no particular target group. It is the sort of novel that readers both young and old, men and women, are going to enjoy, whether they love animals and the countryside or not.

Indeed many older readers have admitted to enjoying James Herriot’s works during their teenage years, the same novels they continue to visit today and whose entertainment value has not dimmed even with the passing of time,

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James Herriot Book Every Living Thing

Overview

Every Living Thing James Herriot

A perfect gift for anyone who loves animals, this fifth and final installment in James Herriot's heartwarming collection brings back familiar friends (including old favorites such as Tricki Woo) and introduces new ones, including Herriot's children Rosie and Jimmy and the marvelously eccentric vet Calum Buchanan.
Every Living Thing: The Warm and Joyful Memoirs of the World's Most Beloved Animal Doctor is a perfect opportunity for existing fans of Herriot's work to reacquaint themselves with his writing, and for those who've never read him to see what generations of animal lovers have already discovered: James Herriot is that rarest of creatures, a genuine master storyteller.