Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields
Tom Rivers, a reporter for The Daily News in Batavia, N.Y., wrote a first-person series about farm work in 2008 that won state and national awards. Now the series, with more background and other information, has been compiled in a book, Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields.

Rivers worked at a dozen farms in Orleans and Genesee counties, trying to find out why so few local residents are willing to work on farms. He discovered the work requires many skills, enormous willpower and physical strength.

Rivers knew the jobs would be hard, but he didn’t realize just how grueling. He also didn’t expect the workers to help him get through the difficult work days.
Rivers, 35, lost 40 pounds in 2008, and whipped himself into good enough shape to run a marathon. He compared that 26.2-mile run with cabbage cutting, and declared the farm work far more exhausting.

The newspaper series, which the book is adapted from, won national honors from the North American Agricultural Journalists and Columbia Journalism School. The Associated Press also recognized the series for “in-depth reporting” and the New York Agricultural Society presented Rivers with a “golden pitchfork” for the project.
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Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields
Tom Rivers, a reporter for The Daily News in Batavia, N.Y., wrote a first-person series about farm work in 2008 that won state and national awards. Now the series, with more background and other information, has been compiled in a book, Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields.

Rivers worked at a dozen farms in Orleans and Genesee counties, trying to find out why so few local residents are willing to work on farms. He discovered the work requires many skills, enormous willpower and physical strength.

Rivers knew the jobs would be hard, but he didn’t realize just how grueling. He also didn’t expect the workers to help him get through the difficult work days.
Rivers, 35, lost 40 pounds in 2008, and whipped himself into good enough shape to run a marathon. He compared that 26.2-mile run with cabbage cutting, and declared the farm work far more exhausting.

The newspaper series, which the book is adapted from, won national honors from the North American Agricultural Journalists and Columbia Journalism School. The Associated Press also recognized the series for “in-depth reporting” and the New York Agricultural Society presented Rivers with a “golden pitchfork” for the project.
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Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields

Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields

by Tom Rivers
Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields
Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields

Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields

by Tom Rivers

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Overview

Tom Rivers, a reporter for The Daily News in Batavia, N.Y., wrote a first-person series about farm work in 2008 that won state and national awards. Now the series, with more background and other information, has been compiled in a book, Farm Hands: Hard work and hard lessons from Western New York fields.

Rivers worked at a dozen farms in Orleans and Genesee counties, trying to find out why so few local residents are willing to work on farms. He discovered the work requires many skills, enormous willpower and physical strength.

Rivers knew the jobs would be hard, but he didn’t realize just how grueling. He also didn’t expect the workers to help him get through the difficult work days.
Rivers, 35, lost 40 pounds in 2008, and whipped himself into good enough shape to run a marathon. He compared that 26.2-mile run with cabbage cutting, and declared the farm work far more exhausting.

The newspaper series, which the book is adapted from, won national honors from the North American Agricultural Journalists and Columbia Journalism School. The Associated Press also recognized the series for “in-depth reporting” and the New York Agricultural Society presented Rivers with a “golden pitchfork” for the project.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940013460430
Publisher: Thomas Rivers
Publication date: 11/16/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 168
File size: 15 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Tom Rivers, 37, is a reporter for The Daily News in Batavia, N.Y. He covers agriculture, local government and other community events for the small-town newspaper. Rivers lives in Albion, N.Y., with his wife Marsha and their four children.
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