"an enchanting book... eminently readable and deceptively ambitious..." Willamette Week
Robyn Scott’s memoir, Twenty Chickens for a Saddle (Penguin Press, 464
pages, $24.95), is a vegan Swiss Family Robinson, complete with its own
campy theme song: a region-specific adaptation of “An English Country
Garden.” Set in the bush in Botswana during the ’90s, it chronicles the
experience of the recently transplanted Scott family from New
Zealand—author “Robbie;” her parents, Keith and Linda; her siblings,
Lulu and Damien; and their various unfortunate pets. Together, the
Scotts weather all kinds of trouble, from a miffed muti (witch doctor)
to fussy nuns at convent school to racist South African neighbors. It’s
an enchanting book from someone who has lived a genuinely interesting
life, and it’s littered with useful historical extras like Sir Seretse
Khama and the rise of HIV.
On a more tacit level, Twenty
Chickens functions as a comprehensive guide to raising well-adjusted
children. Using her own education as a core curriculum, Scott offers
covert meditations on race, class, natural medicine, alternative
education, sustainability and AIDS. But the way she does it—and this is
the book’s great success—is by telling interesting stories and leaving
the pedantry out.
One of the best instances of Scott’s sola
fabula sense is the title-giving story about her desire for a new
saddle. Her parents won’t buy it for her outright, but they agree to
finance a business venture whereby she can earn her own money. Intrepid
Robbie starts an egg business—specifically, humane eggs from cast-out
industrial laying hens—and gets her saddle in the end. But when the
chickens grow old and cease laying, they must be slaughtered, a sight
so odious that Scott folds her business at once. It’s a great
story—alternately laugh-out-loud funny and depressing—and it’s told
with the straightforward practicality of a greedy kid. Only long after
reading it does one realize the vast swath of moral terrain it covers.
In it, there are tacit lessons about life cycles, the humane treatment
of animals and a proper business education.
That doesn’t mean
Twenty Chickens is perfect. As with any book of fables, there exist
only the most tenuous connections between chapters—the same characters,
of course, and the same setting, but little else. Want a compelling,
overarching plot structure? Fugheddaboudit. Also, Scott’s refusal to
draw any but the most obvious moral conclusions from her stories is
both intentional and a little infuriating. But these are quibbles
regarding an otherwise eminently readable and deceptively ambitious
little book. JOHN MINERVINI, April 16th, 2008 |