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・ The Electric House
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・ The Electric Lady
・ The Electric Lady Studio Guitar
・ The Electric Light Orchestra (album)
・ The Electric Lucifer
・ The Electric Prunes
・ The Electric Prunes (album)
・ The Electric Revelators
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・ The Electric Spanking of War Babies
・ The Electric Spanking of War Babies (song)
・ The Egg (theatre)
The Egg and I
・ The Egg and I (disambiguation)
・ The Egg and I (film)
・ The Egg and Jerry
・ The Egg and the Smurfs
・ The Egg Cracker Suite
・ The Egg Crate Wallop
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・ The Egg Tree
・ The Egg-Cited Rooster
・ The Egg-pire Strikes Back
・ The Eggplant That Ate Chicago
・ The Eggs


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The Egg and I : ウィキペディア英語版
The Egg and I

''The Egg and I'', first published in 1945, is a humorous memoir by American author Betty MacDonald about her adventures and travels as a young wife on a chicken farm on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state. The book is based on the author's experiences as a newlywed in trying to acclimate and operate a small chicken farm with her first husband Robert Heskett from 1927 to 1931 near Chimacum, Washington. On visits with her family in Seattle, she told stories of their tribulations, which greatly amused them. In the 1940s, MacDonald's sisters strongly encouraged her to write a book about these experiences. ''The Egg and I'' was MacDonald's first attempt at writing a book.
==Plot==
MacDonald begins her book with a summary description of her childhood and family. Her father was an engineer, and moved frequently with his family throughout the West. Her mother's theory that a wife must support her husband in his career comes into play when the author marries a friend of her brother ("Bob") who soon admits that his dream is to leave his current office job and start a chicken ranch. Knowing nothing about ranching, but eager to support her husband, the author encourages the dream but is unprepared for the primitive conditions that exist on the ranch he purchases.
From this "set up" the book turns to anecdotal stories that rely upon the proverbial "fish out of water" tales that pit MacDonald against her situation and her surroundings, such as the struggle to keep up with the need for water, which needs to be hand carried from a pond to the house until a tank is installed or keeping a fire going in "Stove" or the constant care that chicks need. At one point a guest expresses envy of MacDonald and her husband, as she thinks they live a life full of fresh air and beautiful scenery, which is then followed by MacDonald pointing out that while the guest had lounged in bed that morning, she and her husband had been up before sunrise working for several hours, and then again the couple had stayed up long into the night after the guest had gone to bed.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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