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Down the Common: A Year in the Life of a Medieval Woman (1996)

de Ann Baer

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276896,208 (4.39)32
Fiction. Historical Fiction. HTML:

A year in the life of a peasant woman in medieval England is vividly evoked in this extraordinary portrait of Marion, a carpenter's wife, and her extended family. Based on years of research, Ann Baer brings to life the reality of a world that has been lost.
Rising before dawn in a tiny village to a day of gruelling hard work, Marion and her husband face the daily struggle for survival. Starvation is never far away and travel to the next village is virtually unheard of. Existing without soap, paper or glass and with only the most basic of tools, sickness, fire and natural disaster ever threaten to engulf the small, tightly knit community.
At the mercy of the weather and the Lord of the Manor, each equally unpredictable and inescapable, Marion's life is burdensome but also displays an admirable dignity and fortitude in the face of adversity.
The little village is at one with the natural world around it and each member has a role to play and a place in the hierarchy.
Simple people, living unrecorded lives in remote villages not on the way to anywhere are brought back into focus in Medieval Woman. Ann Baer defines and celebrates the woman at the heart of the community.
This is a unique approach to history, compressing decades of in-depth research on the Middle Ages into one single, immersive, compelling narrative.

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Down the Common, by Ann Baer, was recommended to me by other fans of Ruth Goodman and the Farm series. Like the Farm shows, this book follows daily life in one historical year. The book is written in the month-by-month pattern, almost like a record book. We see a year of daily life, and while there’s definitely a voice, there’s no plot at all. No conflicts besides surviving to the next month, but that’s still compelling. I actually read this book while I wasn’t feeling very well, and I kept trying to ignore my symptoms to keep reading and see what the next month would bring for Marion and her family.

First, a warning: Down The Common is gross. So gross. No laundry, no flushing toilets, loads of vermin, it’s just gross. I understand that a lot of this is accurate but still, yuck. In one scene, it’s finally sunny enough for Marion to wash a winter’s worth of grime out of the dress she wears every day.

Full review on my book blog
  TheFictionAddiction | May 8, 2022 |
A wonderful book, detailed in its description of the life of an ordinary peasant in a small village.

Listening to all this made me wonder just how humanity managed to survive, and develop.

It's a piece of fiction, but very convincing due to all the small details. I'm truly glad I didn't/don't have to live through this.

The narration was beautiful and added to the experience. ( )
  Belana | Dec 15, 2021 |
This book puts you smack down in a reality we'll never experience but which many of our ancestors did. The main character, a serf on a small farm in rural England, has a husband and a couple of children and lives in a one-room shack. Her main concerns are having food for the winter and earning enough goodwill from the landowners that her family will receive blankets and other items to ensure survival in the worst months. She worries about her living children (and about getting pregnant again), mourns those she's lost, thanks the heavens for a strong husband she both admires and loves, and observes the limited world around her. Most terrifying for her is the fate of a neighbor whose husband dies and who is forced to move to the "big house" because she no longer has need for privacy and space. She now sleeps on the floor of the hall with others like her. Another neighboring couple doesn't provide enough for their children, who are always begging. Since food is available only to those who work, the children get little consideration from other serfs or from the landowners. The lives of the landowners don't sound all that wonderful either, but at least they have more security, warmer lodgings, and better food. And the local priest - let's say you'll never again presume the purity of how doctrine was spread.

Life in this hamlet is detailed for one day each month over a year, giving the whole spectrum of such an existence before the endless cycle repeats. It's moving and guaranteed to stay with you over the years. You may even come back to it, as I have. ( )
  auntmarge64 | Mar 30, 2019 |
This is one of my favorite historical novels. Baer perfectly captures the tone of ordinary life in medieval England. ( )
  pandorasmuse | Aug 5, 2010 |
This novel follows the life of Marion, a medieval woman of the peasant classes, through the course of a single year. It's a lot more exciting than it sounds. Survival was an ever-present issue, so the novel actually has a lot in common with the typical thriller, although the enemy is as likely to be the weather and such freak accidents as stumbling into the open-hearth fire as it is to be a jealous neighbor or a selfish aristocrat. Ann Baer's writing puts us right inside her heroine's skin. Don't read the winter chapters in winter unless you're bundled up by the fire - or you're liable to feel as cold and uncomfortable as Marion. But there's beauty here, too. Marion is one of those people, who probably existed in all times and places, who notice things. She may be illiterate and have little time for activities that don't produce food, clothing or shelter, but she reflects on her life and the people around her in ways that illuminate her time and place for the reader.
  margad | Apr 2, 2010 |
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Fiction. Historical Fiction. HTML:

A year in the life of a peasant woman in medieval England is vividly evoked in this extraordinary portrait of Marion, a carpenter's wife, and her extended family. Based on years of research, Ann Baer brings to life the reality of a world that has been lost.
Rising before dawn in a tiny village to a day of gruelling hard work, Marion and her husband face the daily struggle for survival. Starvation is never far away and travel to the next village is virtually unheard of. Existing without soap, paper or glass and with only the most basic of tools, sickness, fire and natural disaster ever threaten to engulf the small, tightly knit community.
At the mercy of the weather and the Lord of the Manor, each equally unpredictable and inescapable, Marion's life is burdensome but also displays an admirable dignity and fortitude in the face of adversity.
The little village is at one with the natural world around it and each member has a role to play and a place in the hierarchy.
Simple people, living unrecorded lives in remote villages not on the way to anywhere are brought back into focus in Medieval Woman. Ann Baer defines and celebrates the woman at the heart of the community.
This is a unique approach to history, compressing decades of in-depth research on the Middle Ages into one single, immersive, compelling narrative.

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