All EOS blogs All Spain blogs  Start your own blog Start your own blog 

"Guiris" galore

It is fascinating what a significant contribution foreigners have made to Spanish life, work and culture. "Guiris", principally Northern Europeans and North Americans, have made and continue to make an impression on Spain. This blog will profile some of these people, dead or alive, famous or not. Enjoy!

CHRIS STEWART – English writer, sheep shearer and farmer
Thursday, November 28, 2024 @ 8:36 AM

I was given a copy of Chris Stewart's “Driving Over Lemons” by my good friend, John Cottam*, a fellow Spanish teacher, as a 50th birthday present in 2000. Strange title, I thought, but, hey, what a great read it turned out to be. It prompted me to read other books by foreigners who had bought property in Spain.

 

[*John Cottam, my friend, sadly died on 16 January 2011. Way too young. He was only 59. I was 60 at the time. His passing was very poignant.]

Funeral Notices

***

I originally wrote an appreciation of Chris Stewart a couple of years ago. Here’s what I wrote then:

***

CHRIS STEWART – rock drummer, sheep shearer, hispanophile and writer

By The Culture Vulture

Friday, January 14, 2022
 

Chris Stewart shot to fame with “Driving Over Lemons” in 1999. Funny, insightful and real, the book told the story of how he bought a peasant farm on the wrong side of the river, with its previous owner still resident.

 

 

 

 

Driving Over Lemons” 

No sooner had this Englishman set eyes on El Valero than he handed over a cheque.  Now all he had to do was explain to Ana, his wife that they were the proud owners of an isolated sheep farm in the Alpujarra Mountains in Southern Spain.  That was the easy part.

Lush with olive, lemon, and almond groves, the farm lacks a few essentialsrunning water, electricity, an access road.  And then there’s the problem of rapacious Pedro Romero, the previous owner, who refuses to leave. 

A perpetual optimist, whose skill as a sheepshearer provides an ideal entrée into his new community, Stewart also possesses an unflappable spirit that, we soon learn, nothing can diminish. 

Wholly enchanted by the rugged terrain of the hillside and the people they meet along the way—among them farmers, including the ever-resourceful Domingo, other expatriates and artists—Chris and Ana Stewart build an enviable life, complete with a daughter, Chloe, and dogs, in a country far from home.

His sequels to “Driving Over Lemons: An Optimist in Andalucia” are “A Parrot in the Pepper Tree”, and “The Almond Blossom Appreciation Society”. They are also great reads and became international bestsellers too.

The Spanish versions of Chris Stewart's Trilogy [Photos courtesy of Google]

 

Chris Stewart - Background

Born in Crawley, Surrey, in 1951 and raised in Horsham in Sussex, Stewart was a classmate of Tony Banks and Peter Gabriel at Charterhouse School in Surrey, and joined them in a school band which went on to become Genesis in January 1967.

Stewart appears on Genesis's first two singles, The Silent Sun / That's Me and A Winter's Tale / One-Eyed Hound. He also drums on their first album. Despite this he was fired from the band in the summer of 1968 due to his poor technique and was replaced by John Silver.

After his somewhat short career as a rock musician he joined a circus, learned how to shear sheep, went to China to write the Rough Guide, gained a pilot’s license in Los Angeles, and completed a course in French cooking.

     Genesis post-Stewart [Photo: Radio Futuro]

 

Other publications

Stewart's publisher, Sort of Books, released another memoir in 2009, entitled Three Ways to Capsize a Boat: An Optimist Afloat. This one focused on sailing.

In 2014 Sort Of Books published a further book of stories, Last Days of the Bus Club, which focuses on his daughter's going to university, and his and Ana's subsequent life alone on the farm.

Stewart has also contributed to two books in the Rough Guides series: the Rough Guide to Andalucia and the Rough Guide to China.

 

A personal perspective

Chris Stewart's trilogy about life in Órgiva certainly inspired me to buy property in Spain, do it up and eventually live here.

By 2001 my first wife, Jeryl, and I had bought our first Spanish property, a modern apartment in a comunidad de propietarios in Ronda (Málaga). I kept Piso Blanco for 18 years.

In 2003 we bought a house, a semi-ruin, to do up. Also in Ronda. I sold Casa Blanca in 2008.

In 2005 I retired from work and got divorced and that summer I “reformed” a house in Ronda for my new girlfriend of the time, MaudeEl Rincón was sold on in 2010.

In September 2008 I met a lovely German lady who was living in Montejaque, a mountain village near Ronda and I moved to live there full-time at the end of December 2008.

In 2011 I bought a villa with pool and gardens for me and Rita, who became my second wife in 2010, to live in. 13 years on we are still in Villa Indiana, which is in Fuente de la Higuera, just outside Ronda.

In 2020 I bought another reforma. I’m just finishing off Casa Real, in Montejaque, which will be a vivienda rural from April 2022.

[Note: Villa Indiana is available to rent at:

3 Bedroom (Sleeps 6) House in Montejaque, Málaga (P50774) - No Booking Fees ]

 

 

***

 

So, thank you, Chris Stewart for the inspiration. That’s why you are number three on my list of top writers about Spain.

 

Note: To read about numbers 1 and 2 on that list and indeed the Culture Vulture’s full top five, click on the links below.

 

© Paul Whitelock

 

Links:

Funeral Notices

JASON WEBSTER – American born writer of fiction and non-fiction

LAURIE LEE - English author and Spanish Civil War volunteer (1914 - 1997)

Top 5 writers on Spain

3 Bedroom (Sleeps 6) House in Montejaque, Málaga (P50774) - No Booking Fees

 

Photos:

Diario Sur

entrelimon.es

Google

Paul Whitelock

Radio Futuro

VozpÓpuli

 

Tags:

50th birthday present, access road, almond groves, Alpujarra Mountains, Ana Stewart,A Parrot in the Pepper Tree”,  books by foreigners who had bought property in Spain, buy property in Spain, Casa Blanca, Casa Real, Charterhouse School, China, Chloe, Chris Stewart, circus, comunidad de propietarios, course in French cooking, Culture Vulture, Domingo, “Driving Over Lemons”, electricity, El Rincón, El Valero, Fuente de la Higuera, Genesis, hispanophile, isolated sheep farm, Jason Webster, Jeryl, John Cottam, John Silver, Last Days of the Bus Club, Laurie Lee, lemon, Los Angeles, Málaga, Montejaque, olive, Órgiva, our first Spanish property, Paul Whitelock, Pedro Romero, Peter Gabriel, pilot’s license, Piso Blanco, reforma, Rita, rock drummer, rock musician, Ronda, Rough Guides,  Rough Guide to Andalucia, Rough Guide to China, running water, shear sheep, sheepshearer, Sort of Books, “The Almond Blossom Appreciation Society”, Three Ways to Capsize a Boat: An Optimist Afloat, Tony Banks, Villa Indiana, villa with pool and gardens, vivienda rural, writer

 



Like 0




0 Comments


Leave a comment

You don't have to be registered to leave a comment but it's quicker and easier if you are (and you also can get notified by email when others comment on the post). Please Sign In or Register now.

Name *
   
Spam protection: 
 
Your comment * (HTML not allowed)
 
 
(Items marked * are required)



 

This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse you are agreeing to our use of cookies. More information here. x