From the Inside Flap:
One day not long ago, a New York driver pulled up next to a local walking along the side of a road in small-town Dublin, New Hampshire. “Can you tell me how to get to Penacook?” the driver asked. The New Yorker didn’t realize that the man he’d stopped for directions wasn’t just any old New England Yankee. As it happened, he was the longtime editor of Yankee magazine and the Old Farmer’s Almanac, Judson D. Hale. The driver also didn’t realize that he’d just delivered the perfect set-up line.“Well,” replied Jud “if I was to go to Penacook, I don’t believe I’d start from here.” But to get at the root of New England humor, the New England character, New England lore, and the New England way of life, you definitely want to start from here – here being Inside New England. Jud Hale’s 1982 classic comprises a lifetime of observation, research, and musing on all things New England. Now updated and with a new introduction from the author, the book provides a path to understanding the crux of a quintessentially American region for new generations of “insiders” and “outsiders.” A seasoned storyteller, Jud takes on small-town life (“We’re not quaint and there’s plenty to do all winter”), traditional foods (the early settlers considered lobster junk food best suited for prisoners and servants), the weather (forecasting is one thing; getting it right quite another), legends (Lizzie Borden, Molly Stark, Marie Antoinette, etc.), genealogy (hobnobbing with snobs), and more. How do you avoid driving the town fire truck? What are the six responsibilities of being a Vermonter? How do you correctly mispronounce the names of places like Bangor, Berlin, Worcester, and Gloucester? Inside New England delves into these and other questions with trademark Yankee understatement and humor. For instance, that romantic idea about sea captain’s wives watching for their husband’s ships from widow’s walks? Pure bunk. Rather, widow’s walks were platforms for storing sand and water for dousing chimney fires. And did you know that in seventeenth-century Connecticut, ministers were forbidden by law from performing marriage ceremonies? The blue law was designed to protect the clergy from participating in an institution that encouraged “procreative activity.” Ayup, it’s true.The way into the essence of New England and the Yankee character? You can get there, it turns out, from here: Inside New England, Judson Hale’s funny and fascinating look at Yankee life and lore.
About the Author:
JUDSON D. HALE, SR., joined Yankee Publishing Incorporated in September 1958 as an assistant editor. He worked his way up in the family business as associate editor and managing editor, and also became editor of The Old Farmer's Almanac. In 2000 he became editor-in-chief for both publications, and is now also chairman of the board of Yankee Publishing.
A sought-after speaker, Jud makes regular local and national appearances to talk about The Old Farmer's Almanac and the New England way of life. He has been a guest on the "Today" show, "Good Morning America," CNN, "Late Night with Conan O'Brien," and numerous other television and radio programs. He is the author or editor of many books, including The Education of a Yankee (Harper & Row, 1987), and Discovering Our Faraway Brother (PublishAmerica, 2007). Born in Boston and raised on a dairy farm in Vanceboro, Maine, Jud graduated from Dartmouth College (Class of 1955) in 1958, having served with the Third Armored Division as a Tank Commander from 1955 to 1957. He makes his home in Dublin, New Hampshire, with his wife, Sally.
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