FOR all blog readers who have read and enjoyed my Greek travel memoir, Things Can Only Get Feta, I am very pleased to announce that the sequel is now available as a Kindle and paperback on Amazon worldwide.
Called Homer’s Where the Heart Is, the story takes up where Feta left off, as we decide to stay longer in the Mani in southern Greece after our first amazing year, despite the economic crisis becoming more severe.
We rent a house in a slightly different location, but nearby the first village of Megali Mantineia. In Paleohora, we share an olive grove with our Greek landlords and their crazy collection of animals, including a she-wolf with a shady past.
It’s a fabulous new chapter in our odyssey but, typically for Greece, not everything goes to plan, although there’s plenty of entertainment as we deal with Greeks on the edge, gun-toting farmers and Wallace, our much loved Jack Russell dog, is up to a few of his tricks as usual. But he also faces one of his most challenging problems yet.
I hope readers of the first book will be pleased to find that some of the original Greek characters from the hillside village of Megali Mantineia are very much part of this book, as we keep in close contact with them and take part in more of their village activities. Foteini the goat farmer, who charmed readers in Feta, is still one of the stars of this book, with her endearing and eccentric rural ways and her sense of fun.
We also explore more of the southern Peloponnese, and visit new locations, including ‘Little Australia’, the charming island of Kythera, and the wonderful house of the late Patrick Leigh Fermor in Kardamili, while researching a feature article on the famous travel writer’s home.
There is also a grittier side to this book as the economic crisis intensifies and Greece edges closer to bankruptcy. Interwoven with the narrative of the book is my own back story from another troubling era in Greece’s history, which provides an interesting parallel to current events.
In the early 1970s, as a young woman fresh from high school, I travelled to Greece and spent a year in Athens during the military dictatorship. This was an edgy and fascinating time that I have never written about before. It will reveal as much about Greece as it does about my own personal journey and my continuing love affair with this country.
I hope you enjoy this book, and in the coming months I will share with blog readers some pictures and stories from behind the scenes that might help you to get a broader idea of what life has been like in Greece during the crisis.
Lastly, I must thank the very talented English artist Tony Hannaford for his absolutely gorgeous illustration for this book. Tony has a great love of Greece and has the ability to capture the vibrancy and beauty of this country to perfection, as he also did with the cover of Things Can Only Get Feta. To see more of his work on Greece and the Mediterranean in general, please visit his website www.anthonyhannaford.co.uk
The editing and formatting for the Kindle was done by ex-journalist Jim Bruce and I can’t praise his work enough. For more information on his service please visit www.ebooklover.co.uk
Please let me know how you like the book, and if you do, please think about leaving a review on Amazon. Writers are always very appreciative of this. And comments to the blog are also very welcome.
As always, I thank you for your ongoing interest in our Greek odyssey and for support of Things Can Only Get Feta and all your very kind messages to the blog.
* To buy the new book Homer’s Where The Heart Is in Kindle or paperback in Britain or the US, please click on one of these links: amazon.co.uk or amazon.com The book is also available on European and most other international sites as well.
For more information about the books and about our time living, firstly in the Mani and currently in Koroni in Messinia, visit our website www.bigfatgreekodyssey.com
© All rights reserved. Text and photographs copyright of the authors 2015. No content/text or photographs may be copied from the blog without the prior written permission of the authors. This applies to all posts on the blog.
Roll on May. Can’t wait to get this in paperback.
Μπράβο σου, Marjory! Congratulations.
Hi Katie,
Thanks so much. I hope you like it. There’s plenty of Mani and Maniates. Opa!! xxx
Regards,
Marjory
Hi Lynn,
Thanks for your comment.
I hope you like the sequel. Do let me know.
Regards,
Marjory
Just bought your new book on Kindle, In the middle of Things can only get Feta and loving it AND we’re off to Crete tomorrow Happy days! x
Hi Gill,
That’s you loaded up with reading material then!
Enjoy the books. Please let me know.
And most of all enjoy Crete. How lovely!
Regards,
Marjory
Non-Greeks in Greece! My favorite topic. . . very dear to my own heart. Of course after you are there for a few days, you are considered Greek : ) I’m waiting for the delivery of both of your books. The cover art is beautiful. I’m not sure if I’m going save them to read while I’m in Greece this summer or read them as soon as they arrive. I’m not very good at saving my sweets for later. . .
Hi Linda,
Thanks for your comment. There are quite a lot of non-Greeks in Greece now and generally locals seem to appreciate their support and probably think we’re mad being here in the first place due to the crisis.
I do hope you like the books. I hope the antics of the non-Greeks, the locals, and especially naughty Wallace the Jack Russell with give you a giggle. Let me know.
Kind regards,
Marjory
I’ve loved both your books. Thank you for some very enjoyable reading and kisses to Wallace.
Best wishes
Angie
Hi, I’m quite interested in “the wonderful house of the late Patrick Leigh Fermor in Kardamili” and plan to visit the place in the coming months. However, I can’t find any contact information on the website. I’m wondering if you might share any contact information of the lovely place. Your great support will be highly appreciated.
Best Regards,
Bryan
Hi Bryan,
I believe that the house is only opened for certain occasions at present. You would be best to get in touch with the Benaki museum and ask about how you can visit it. You will find contact numbers if you Google the museum and the contact details should be there.
Good luck. I hope you get to see it one day. I included a chapter on the house in my latest book Homer’s Where the Heart Is. I can’t guarantee that all the personal things that we were lucky enough to see in the house after Paddy Fermor died will still be there. Much of it has been removed for safe keeping.
Do let me know how you get on.
Regards,
Marjory
Hi, Marjory
I’ll contact with Benaki museum directly for visiting. If I get the chance to visit the beautiful house of Patrick Leigh Fermor in Kardamili, I’ll share with you something after the visit. Furthermore, I’ll also go to read the chapter in your book to get more information before my visit. Thanks for your feedback and great support.
Best Regards,
Bryan Hung
You’re welcome Bryan.
I will be interested to know if all the personal items are still lying around, especially in Paddy’s study.
We were taken round the house in 2011 by someone from the Benaki museum but I have heard that since then, groups of people have been invited to stay and I hope many of the personal items were taken away for safekeeping. It would be a shame if they were left in the house to chance because they are a unique glimpse into Paddy’s life.
Regards,
Marjory