All Cheeses Great and Small: A Life Less Blurry
By (Author) Alex James
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
1st August 2012
19th July 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular music
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Composers and songwriters
782.42166092
Paperback
300
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 20mm
230g
This is the story of Alex Jamess transition from a leading light of the Britpop movement in the 1990s, to gentleman farmer, artisan cheese-maker and father of five.
ALL CHEESES GREAT AND SMALL is the follow-up memoir to Alex James's first book, BIT OF A BLUR, the story of his excessive pop star lifestyle during the nineties. But now Alex has grown up, fallen in love and got married. He has also fallen passionately for his new home, an enormous rambling farmhouse in the Cotswolds, set in two hundred acres of beautiful British countryside.
The farm represents not just a new house for Alex, but also a new career. As he breathes new life into the old farm he chances across an unexpected calling: making cheese. His cheeses, Blue Monday, Farleigh Wallop and Little Wallop have received widespread media interest and are now sold through many outlets.
The story culminates with an account of the triumphant reformation of Blur for Glastonbury 2009.
Jamess prose is clean and poetic. His childlike wonder at the simple things from herons to heaps of rubble can be infectious DAILY TELEGRAPH
A joy to read. Prose flows and weaves and curls itself into pleasing rhythms(Alex James) can write like a god SPECTATOR
The upbeat tone matches that of his Blur-era autobiography A BIT OF A BLUR, treating his downsize from rock heart-throb to cockerel-throttling country gent as if cheese contests were Britpop orgies. Riding bikes, the smell of berry bushes, piles of cow dung: all brilliant NME
Alex James was the bass guitarist in the nineties band Blur, a life he chronicled with great success in his first book, Bit of a Blur. He now lives on a farm in the Cotswolds with his wife and five children, makes cheese, writes for the Spectator and a weekly food column for The Sun. He and also contributes to a number of other British newspapers including The Independent, The Observer, The Times, The Sunday Times and has his own show on Classic FM. In September 2011 he hosted the Harvest festival at his farm, combining the best in British music and food.