A. G. Street was born Arthur G. Street in 1892 and grew up on a farm near Wilton, Wiltshire. He was a broadcaster and writer and wrote 25 books with farming life at their centre. Perhaps his most famous book,
Farmer's Glory, describes his time in Canada before he returned to Wiltshire. Another book,
Strawberry Roan, was turned into a film. He died in 1966.
A. G. Street (1892-1966) was a farmer, writer and broadcaster. His first book,
Farmer's Glory, published in 1932, was an immediate success and launched him on a long and prolific writing career. Most of his books were published by Faber & Faber and it is therefore appropriate that Faber Finds is re-establishing him with reissues of
Farmer's Glory,
The Gentleman of the Party,
Already Walks Tomorrow, A
Crook in the Furrow,
Strawberry Roan and
The Endless Furrow
First published by Faber & Faber in 1940, A Crook in the Furrow was described by the Manchester Evening News as 'like no other detective story. Mr Street's plots and stratagems, his devices are well up to the most exacting professional standards. As a background for it there...
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