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Extra Virgin: A Young Woman Discovers the Italian Riviera Where Every Month Is Enchanted

Extra Virgin: A Young Woman Discovers the Italian Riviera Where Every Month Is Enchanted

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Author: Annie Hawes
Creator: Miriam Margolyes
Publisher: HarperAudio
Category: Book

List Price: $25.00
Buy New: $1.92
You Save: $23.08 (92%)



New (9) Used (10) from $1.49

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 51 reviews
Sales Rank: 1017550

Format: Abridged, Audiobook
Media: Audio Cassette
Edition: Abridged
Number Of Items: 4
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 4.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 0694524077
Dewey Decimal Number: 945.18
EAN: 9780694524075
ASIN: 0694524077

Publication Date: January 1, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: GREAT Bargain Book Deal - like new, some may have small remainder mark - Ships out by NEXT Business Day - Over ONE MILLION Amazon orders filled - 100% Satisfaction Guarantee!

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Extra Virgin: A Young Woman Discovers the Italian Riviera, Where Every Month Is Enchanted
  • Paperback - Extra Virgin: A Young Woman Discovers the Italian Riviera, Where Every Month is Enchanted.
  • Paperback - Extra Virgin: A Young Woman Discovers the Italian Riviera, Where Every Month Is Enchanted

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  • The Lady in the Palazzo: At Home in Umbria
  • The Hills of Tuscany
  • Living in a Foreign Language: A Memoir of Food, Wine, and Love in Italy

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Fed up with cold, foggy London and the high cost of real estate, Annie Hawes is persuaded by her sister Lucy to travel to Italy and graft roses for the winter. The sisters arrive in rural Liguria with some formal Italian, no knowledge of rose grafting, and visions of Mediterranean men and sun. What they find is a town full of hard-working, wary olive growers smack in the middle of an olive oil depression who think these two young Englishwomen are nuts. Extra Virgin tells the story of the sisters' acclimation--theirs to Liguria and Liguria to them--and how they fell in love with a crumbling farmhouse in the hills.

Annie quickly finds that though they are only two miles from the Italian Riviera, it might as well be a hundred. Liguria is an old town full of time-honored peculiarities, especially in regard to espresso consumption (never, ever, after lunch; it will close your stomach) and swimming before summertime officially starts. "Seawater at the wrong time of year is even worse for your health than coffee at the wrong time of day, and the beach is only deserted because, as far as the citizens are concerned, if you put so much as a toe into the water before June you are certain to die within the week from exposure or pneumonia or both," says Hawes. Eventually, the sisters are accepted by the townsfolk, though they find the idea of the women buying the farmhouse and running it themselves (there are 50 olive trees on the land) fantastical.

Extra Virgin draws you in to the heart of Liguria and its inhabitants. Hawes has a knack for drawing characters and especially for describing the luscious meals that they are served--and eventually learn to cook. "Lucy and I are kindly allowed to make the tomato-and-basil salad," Hawes says, "and do our best not to be offended by being complemented on how like a proper tomato-and-basil salad it is." Pour yourself an espresso (as long as it's before lunch) or a grappa (aids the digestion), and then sit down to enjoy Extra Virgin. --Dana Van Nest

Product Description

In 1983, a pale Annie Hawes and her equally pale sister leave England for the sun-drenched olive groves of a small Italian town in Liguria. With fantasies of handsome men and swimming in the sea urging them on, they sign up to graft roses -- something they know nothing about -- but they figure they can fake it for ten weeks. What they don't count on is falling in love with Italy--and with one old farmhouse in particular.

Although they quickly realize that rugged Liguria is not gentle Tuscany, they cannot resist the charming little town. Annie, who has never wanted to settle down anywhere, doesn't want to leave. How will she find a way to make this old derelict farmhouse her own? What will the Ligurians think about their new neighbor with her strange ways staying on for good?

For everyone who has ever wondered what happens when you fall in love with a certain house, on a certain hill, near a certain village -- Extra Virgin limns Annie Hawes' joyful romance with the enchantingly beautiful Italian Riviera.

Read by Miram Margolyes



Customer Reviews:   Read 46 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Year in Ligure   September 30, 2008
This is a delightful tale of time spent in place and time near but far away from the stilish and popular Cotta Azura. I know this area well from time spent rebuilding the Italian Steel Industry in Cornigliano under the Marshall Plan. The author has a keen eye and ear for detail.


5 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Book   April 15, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

On a wet, cold, typically gloomy day in England in 1983, Annie Hawes (broke and out of work) and her sister Lucy (bored and lusting for adventure) decide that enough is enough. Clutching a job description offering ten weeks work grafting roses on the Italian Riviera, room and board included, Lucy assures Annie that they can lie their way into the job and fake their way through it. Off they go to San Pietro, Liguria, quaint, sun-kissed village on the Mediterranean to live among the hankie-heads (men's knotted at the corners, women's tied at the nape of the neck). Although the sky and sea are blue and beautiful, the hoped-for handsome, tanned young men and wild night life of the Riviera are non-existent. It seems that their village is undiscovered by tourists, and the inhabitants have very strict ideas about proper behavior for young women and the correct way to do just about everything--"Never drink cappuccino after twelve noon. Italian is only spoken by policemen and tax collectors. Women do not speak to men in a bar, even if they are close friends. Swimming in the ocean before July will make you ill--no matter how hot it is."

Unexpectedly, Annie and Lucy fall in love with the little town and all its peculiar, lovable inhabitants. They even find a delerict old farmhouse on a lovely hillside overlooking the ocean--a real fixer-upper with no toilet or running water. They could buy it for a couple of thousand dollars, but they have no permanent job or savings. How they manage to make a home for themselves in San Pietro is a delightful tale, full of laughter, local color, and amazing information about olive trees. And in case you are so enchanted that you think perhaps you will just move there yourself, the last chapter is a helpful recent update on San Pietro.

A wonderful book written by a woman who turned her fantasy into reality with humor, determination, and a few bald-faced lies.

by Carolyn Blankenship
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women



5 out of 5 stars Living as an Italian   December 24, 2007
I have read a number of Italy travelogues, from folks who are just traveling through to expats and those who choose to live there part time. The most enjoyable aspect of this book is that the author choses to focus on the people who live there. Most of the other books on this topic that I've read are rather ego-centric and reveal more on the topic of their authors than on the country or its people. But this book is centered on the stories of the Italians whose community she has joined and whose customs and conventions she is learning. Her delightfully dry wit and British sense of humor are a plus.


5 out of 5 stars Wonderful!!!   July 3, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Annie Hawes has a wonderfully detailed and descriptive style of writing therefore this was not a story that could be breezed through but rather something to be read slowly and deliberately, savoring every word. She gave a realistic and honest view of life in the Italian countryside which this Italian-American found to be very enlighting!


5 out of 5 stars A wonderful read   March 8, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Delightful voice, funny anecdotes, cleverly written. You will find yourself chuckling out loud more than once.


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