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Michelle Ule, Author

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in Books· Historical Research· Life's challenges

The Egg and I? Or Not?

I read The Egg and I as a young teenager back in the dark ages.

I remember liking it and so I read Betty MacDonald‘s sequels: The Plague and I and Onions in the Stew.

She wrote another memoir titled Anyone Can Do Anything, which I just discovered last week when I reread the first three and picked up the fourth book.

The books were interesting and enlightening, when they weren’t irritating.

The instigation

We recently returned from a fabulous trip to the Olympic Peninsula.

On the way back to the airport, we detoured through Port Townsend, an old frontier town on Puget Sound.

As we headed down a scenic two-lane highway, I remembered Betty MacDonald’s blockbuster bestseller, The Egg and I, took place just south of Port Townsend.

Bits of the story came to mind as I looked up at the Olympic Mountain backdrop she described as ominous.

I’d always considered them dramatic and friendly when I lived in the area.

My memory reminded me she thought the thick pine trees pushing up against the small chicken ranch were oppressive.

Egg and I

The books are old

The area near Chimacum is clear and open now, green pastureland dotted with cows and sheep. Beautiful to my city eyes.

MacDonald lived on a chicken ranch from 1927-1931, so things obviously have changed.

Here’s a description from the Port Townsend Leader newspaper website, about the book:

“The Egg and I is about chicken farming, plus a lot more. Author Betty MacDonald’s bright voice, endless complaints and cutting characterizations made the memoir, published in 1945, a bestseller, and brought thousands of tourists to the area, as well as a lawsuit and some hurt feelings.

One of the book’s dominant tones is self-deprecating whining.

“On a chicken ranch,” she writes, “there never dawns a beautiful day that isn’t immediately spoiled by some great big backbreaking task.”

When we passed The Egg and I Road, I laughed.

(You can see a photo of the sign here, we past too quickly for me to get my camera out!)

Rereading the Books

More than The Egg and I, I remember being impressed by The Plague and I–the story of the year Macdonald suffered with tuberculosis and spent nine months in a sanitarium in 1938.

Egg and I

By Muhammad Mahdi Karim (www.micro2macro.net)

On rereading the four books, The Plague and I remained my favorite and worth rereading. I skimmed the other three books.

The books were written during World War II when a desperate MacDonald was in sore need of funds.

A 1945 surprising and immediate bestseller, The Egg and I and stayed on the list for more than a year.

It struck a humorous note in a difficult time for many.

Claudette Colbert and Fred MacMurray starred in a popular movie filmed the next year–a screwball comedy I preferred to the book. The film spawned the Ma and Pa Kettle sequels.

Unfortunately, MacDonald’s humorous takes on events wore thin. I tired of reading about endless cigarettes and ridiculous responses to tragedy.

She’s a clever wordsmith with a witty sense of humor. Her older sister Mary Bard got her the contract for The Egg and I and encouraged her to recount the experiences her Seattle family thought hilarious.

As a social history, the books work–though MacDonald’s depictions of Native Americans made my 21st century ears cringe.

Mrs. Piggle Wiggle

Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Farm book cover

Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle’s Farm   (Wikipedia)

As a kid and a sometimes cynical parent, I liked her Mrs. Piggle Wiggle books.

In those children’s books, MacDonald applied her ironic wit into silly stories that taught lessons in a funny way.

They still make me laugh and I’ve never forgotten the way Mrs. Piggle Wiggle–a form of Nanny McPhee–taught a hapless mother how to get her kids to pick up their rooms.

Is it fair to reread books written for a different audience in a far different time and place?

The historian in me says yes.

And as the granddaughter of a chicken rancher–though in far more comfortable southern California–The Egg and I was worth a reread.

It may be worth noting my mother hated chickens.

Tweetables

The Egg and I as social history? Click to Tweet

Historian yes, reader no, The Egg and I. Click to Tweet

The Egg and I and its sequels. Click to Tweet

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Books, Historical Research, Life's challenges Tagged With: best selling memoirs, Betty MacDonald, Egg and I, Hood Canal, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle, Olympic Peninsula, Olympic Peninsula books, Plague and I, Port Townsend, Puget Sound, Washington

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Meet the Author

Michelle Ule

Michelle Ule is a bestselling author of historical novellas, an essayist, blogger and the biographer of Mrs. Oswald Chambers: The Woman Behind the World's Bestselling Devotional.

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