
This light-hearted and humorous story is best enjoyed while relaxing on a summer day. The story is told from multiple perspectives, and it reads more like a play than a novel, with only the props missing. While listening, one can easily picture each of the unique characters, as well as the scenery around them.

The Darling Buds of May is read by Philip Franks, who does a wonderful job with these voices. Will he choose to go back to his tax office, or will he stay with the Larkins for a while and see what country living has to offer him? As his visit is extended, he experiences his first strawberry season, as well as a horse riding competition, and learns how to eat country-style. And the joys of the country become dearer and dearer to his heart. Distracting him with food, alcohol, and his beautiful daughter, Mariette, Pop tries to keep him from his mission.Ĭharlton wants to keep his focus, but finds he enjoys Mariette’s company too much to consider leaving any time soon. But the crafty junk dealer has other ideas.

Altogether ‘perfick’ escapist listening – and there are four sequels.Ĭedric Charlton arrives on the Larkin doorstep, determined to get Pop to complete his tax form. Bates was inspired to invent the Larkin family while on holiday in Kent, when a beaming man holding a wad of bank notes came into the village shop and purchased ice-creams and strawberries galore for his enormous family.

Since his luscious daughter Mariette has a bun in her oven that Ma Larkin didn’t bake, when the naïve and sentimental Cedric Charlton arrives from the Inland Revenue to ask about profits, Pop quickly identifies him as an ideal husband. Pop Larkin has a sunny view of the world and an unabashedly eyes-tight-shut approach to taxation.

Still smarting from coughing up tax due? Solace yourself by listening to Philip Franks’s nicely paced narration of H.E. Bates A Breath of French Air (unabridged) The Darling Buds of May (unabridged) A Little of What You Fancy (unabridged) Oh! To Be in England (unabridged) When the Green Woods Laugh (unabridged) Reviews
