The Desperate Diary of a Country Housewife

The Desperate Diary of a Country Housewife
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If you've ever dreamt of a new life in the country, this highly entertaining and candid account of country living might make you think again…Fresh air, rolling fields, Cath Kidston tea towels and home-baked cake – isn't that what Martha's new life will be?Apparently not. Having upped sticks and moved her young family from the gritty city to Paradise, she discovers things aren't quite that easy. Collapsing kitchen ceilings; a plague of slugs; coffee mornings with Stepford mums and garden warfare with the neighbours are just a few of the trials. And with her husband away working in London, Martha just can't stop thinking about the sexy builder who's meant to be turning the house into her dream home…

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THE DESPERATE DIARY OF A COUNTRY HOUSEWIFE

A Cautionary Tale

Daisy Waugh


For My Husband

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Dedication

February 5>th

February 9>th

February 10>th

COUNTRY MOLE

February 14>th

February 21>st

February 22>nd

February 24>th

COUNTRY MOLE

Monday February 27>th

Tuesday February 28>th

Tuesday night

Wednesday

March 2>nd

Friday 4>th

March 7>th

COUNTRY MOLE

March 14>th

Friday March 18>th

Saturday Very late Very very very late

Sunday Very very very early

Tuesday

Wednesday

COUNTRY MOLE

Friday

COUNTRY MOLE

Thursday April 12>th

Sunday April 15>th

April 16>th

Friday

COUNTRY MOLE

Thursday

Monday

COUNTRY MOLE

Monday April 30>th

Tuesday

May 7>th

May 9>th

Thursday May 10>th Very late

May 11>th

COUNTRY MOLE

May 18>th

May 20>th

May 21>st

COUNTRY MOLE

May 28>th

May 30>th

June 1>st

June 8>th

COUNTRY MOLE

June 17>th

June 21>st

June 26>th

June 28>th

June 30>th

COUNTRY MOLE

July 12>th

COUNTRY MOLE

July 16>th

July 18>th

COUNTRY MOLE

July 22>nd

July 24>th

COUNTRY MOLE

August 1>st

August 11>th

August 12>th

COUNTRY MOLE

August 17>th

August 19>th

COUNTRY MOLE

August 29>th

September 3>rd

COUNTRY MOLE

September 12>th

COUNTRY MOLE

September 25>th

October 4>th

October 5>th

COUNTRY MOLE

October 14>th

October 17>th

COUNTRY MOLE

October 25>th

October 27>th

COUNTRY MOLE

November 7>th

COUNTRY MOLE

November 13>th

November 15>th

November 20>th

COUNTRY MOLE

December 12>th

COUNTRY MOLE

January 25>th London

About the Author

Acknowledgments

Copyright

About the Publisher

Two summers ago, Martha Mole and family moved from London to start a new life in the Country. It didn’t go as smoothly as planned.

She kept the following diary. It should be noted, however, that there may have been times when her imagination got the better of her.

About a year before our adventures began I dreamed of a house set in fields, with a moat round it. It was ramshackle and much too big, hidden away in a secret, sunny coomb that nobody but I knew about. I think it may have looked a little like a medieval castle, with tumbling ramparts and a drawbridge, and yet simultaneously like a large terraced house somewhere in Notting Hill Gate.

In any case, in my dream I knew it was the house we’d been searching for. Not only that, I knew that this beautiful dream house, though surrounded by rivers and fields, was also within walking distance of Hammersmith tube station. And it was for sale. And it was being snapped up—not by an annoying Russian oligarch, nor even by my brother-in-law, the amazingly successful banker. It was being snapped up by us. We—husband, the two children, myself, and a mysterious brown puppy calling itself Mabel—were trading it in for our ordinary terraced house in Shepherds Bush, with its views over three giant satellite dishes and a multistorey car park, and we were going to live there, a life of carefree rural bliss, happily and wholesomely, for ever after. I remember waking up feeling exhilarated. And the feeling lasted, as I waded hither and thither through the usual Shepherds Bush knife victims and sundry litter, pretty much for the rest of the day.

The quest to find a place more satisfactory than Shepherds Bush to raise our young children continued as it had before. Thehusband and I had bored ourselves to sleep sometimes, discussing the options: Los Angeles? Sri Lanka? Sydney? New York? Ealing Common?…Not all the suggestions were realistic of course, but because, like everyone else’s, the value of our ordinary terraced house seemed to quadruple each fortnight, almost every option we threw in, however absurd, felt vaguely, distantly possible.

And there was always one thing we seemed to agree upon—that pretty much anywhere would be preferable to Shepherds Bush.

So we talked and we talked. And we talked and we talked.

And we talked.

And then one day, suddenly, the talking finished. We had made a decision.

I wonder now, with the benefit of the awful year and a half behind me, whether we were simply defeated by the sheer boredom of it. There came a point, perhaps, where neither of us could endure the conversation a moment longer.

…New Orleans? Kirkbymoorside? Malibu? Pitlochry? Nassau? Switzerland? Isle of Man? Barbados? King’s Cross? Marylebone? Bordeaux? Lamu? Winchester? Westchester? Henley? Delhi?…

The South West.

The following diary has been edited slightly—I’ve obscured a few names (or changed them) and for obvious reasons I’ve removed any give-away clues to our precise location. Otherwise it stands pretty much as I wrote it, a fairly accurate record of one very urban woman’s foolhardy—idealistic—attempts to adapt to family life in the English countryside.

I’d seen the property programmes. I’d read the lifestyle magazines. I’d looked in awe—and guilt—at the happy, healthy faces of those young families who dared to leave the Big Smoke behind



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