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| Over Hill and Dale | 
enlarge | Author: Gervase Phinn Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd Category: Book
List Price: £8.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £8.98 (100%)
New (32) from £2.97
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 7506
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 1.2
ISBN: 0140281290 Dewey Decimal Number: 641 EAN: 9780140281293 ASIN: 0140281290
Publication Date: March 29, 2001 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: In very good clean condition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Over Hill and Dale March 31, 2008 I have read all of the five "Dales" books as I am a former teacher turned teaching assistant who works in a primary school in the same area where Gervase Phinn used to work. I feel that I can relate to the stories as I often see and hear the most humorous things that children say and the teaching staff encounter! The books are "unputdownable" and draw the reader straight into the landscape of the Yorkshire Dales. I think that Gervase Phinn has a natural talent for storytelling as these 5 books show. Also if you ever get the chance, do go and see him live, his stage show is brilliant.
Yorkshire Tales to Warm the Heart January 9, 2003 23 out of 25 found this review helpful
Gervase Phinn writes in the way you imagine most teachers would - with a wry view of the world supported with anecdotes from the classroom. The result in this case is a tale that I could not put down.Phinn describes superbly the landscape and attitudes of Yorkshire. If you have lived there and loved it as I have, then so much of this will ring true. I would thoroughly recommend this to anyone who is diconbobulated by the violence and harshness of City living - a true tonic!
Probably better on the radio July 9, 2002 14 out of 88 found this review helpful
If you like cliches, one-dimensional characters, unrealistic dialogue, inconsequential stories, saccharin-sweet sentimentality and repetition, then this is the book for you. Alternatively, you can read the book, as I did, during a bout of fever and let Gervase Phinn's aimless meanderings rev up your delirium.It's a rare author who can achieve what Gervase Phinn has done in creating the characters of his colleagues - men who bicker so tediously the the reader finds himself fast-forwarding to the end of their conversation in the certain knowledge that he will not have missed anything either important or amusing. A previous reviewer notes that the funniest moment, the summit of Phinn's comedic art, was an epidemic of head-lice. That really says it all about the comic achievements of "Over Hill and Dale". And thoe characters. The men are infantile. The women are either harridans or as wet as Yorkshire puddles. (The exception, a sassy female school inspector, is wheeled on for the sake of a painfully-predictable little pseudo-feminist anecdote and then disappears from view for the rest of the book.) The narrator himself comes across as a naive prig. I tried reading short passages aloud to myself, in order to understand why "Over Hill and Dale" was so popular when on the radio. And indeed, when you slow the prose down to speaking pace the bombardment of of cliches becomes more tolerable. So, in the desire to conclude on a positive note, let it be recorded that I can not recommend this book too strongly to slow readers.
An honest amusing account of life as a school inspector. January 6, 2002 40 out of 43 found this review helpful
Being a teacher and having survived the dreaded OFSTED, I was drawn to read about the life of a school inspector in the hope that it would make them seem more human! Gervase Phinn writes with honesty and warmth abouth his experiences whilst working as an inspector in North Yorkshire.At times I was laughing out loud at his tales. Phinn describes in detail the sort of embarrassing incidents that you believe only happen to yourself! I especially loved his account of when he caught head lice and then passed them on to all his colleagues in the education department! Phinn details the lessons that he has observed and the words of wisdom that came from the mouths of the children. He shows a genuine interest in the children and is at times moved to tears by their contributions. This book will be enjoyed by anyone with a sense of humour but especially those in the education sector!
Wonderful tale of Yorkshire folk, gentle humour. December 11, 2001 21 out of 27 found this review helpful
I loved this book. It is full of witty and well observed incidents. The characters are nicely described and the scenery......well it makes you want to go. These books are similar to the Herriot series.
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