'All Creatures Great and Small': Who Was the Real James Herriot?
The British author and veterinarian didnt always let the facts get in the way of a good story. It caused some occasional friction.
James Alfred Wight, better known by his pen name, James Herriot, shared his experiences as a country vet in a series of beloved books. But the stories were never precisely autobiographical.
'Beginning at the age of 50, the beloved veterinarian James Alfred Wight led a double life. By day, he tended to animals in and around the English village where he lived, and in the evenings, writing under the pen name James Herriot, he chronicled his experiences, both past and present.
The resulting eight books sold more than 60 million copies worldwide and inspired multiple film and television adaptations, the latest being All Creatures Great and Small, the finale of which airs Sunday on Masterpiece on PBS. (The series is also streaming via Amazon with the PBS Masterpiece add-on.)
Wight didnt fully retire until 1989, after 50 years as a vet. (He died in 1995, at the age of 78.) The magic of his stories was that they seemed to be set in a land that time forgot, and their cozy glow is due partly to his blurring of the lines between fact and fiction. (Spoiler alert: It caused some major friction at work.)
But what was Wights life really like? Competing biographies including a heavily researched but still somewhat speculative one by Graham Lord (James Herriot: The Life of a Country Vet) and a more detailed but inevitably biased one by Wights son, Jim (The Real James Herriot: A Memoir of My Father) make it difficult to verify certain stories. Lord contends that Wights tales are mostly either recycled stories he heard elsewhere or wholly apocryphal. Jim Wight a veterinarian like his father writes that 90 percent of the stories are based on real cases, even if sometimes they are borrowed from other animal doctors (including Jim).'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/19/arts/television/all-creatures-james-herriot.html?