Maggie Smith-Bendell was born on the edge of a pea field near Bridgwater in Somerset in 1941. She & her family are Romani Gypsies & as she grew up Maggie learned the old crafts & customs of the Gypsies traditional way of life. Her family travelled the length & breadth of the countryside eking a living from the woods & hedgerows catching rabbits pheasants & wild duck. They did all manner of fieldwork for farmers including picking peas beans & hops
- & as soon as Maggie was old enough she contributed to the familys labour. Ever since they arrived in Europe centuries ago the Gypsies have been persecuted for their outsider status but the last sixty years or so have perhaps seen the greatest threats to their culture to the extent that their traditional way of life is in danger of disappearing altogether: changes in the law changes in agriculture many things have undermined the Gypsies freedom to live as they wish. In this wonderful memoir full of the language & lore of the Gypsies Maggie Smith-Bendell gives us a true insight into a way of life that has more or less vanished: driven by the seasons with an extraordinary closeness to nature she & her family faced numerous hardships including the deaths of beloved family members. As well as telling the story of her familys ups & downs in the course of their yearly journeys to the pea-fields of Somerset & the hop-gardens of Herefordshire Maggie recounts her own journey to become a prominent campaigner for Gypsy rights. An autobiography told straight from the heart Our Forgotten Years" is both moving & inspiring."