I love this book. I love the tone and style. I love the author's commitment to her family and to the planet. I love the whole witty take on the way feminism cajoled women out of the house into a desert of consumerism and career frustration. But here's the problem: we can't all have our own farm. Some of us, therefore, will need to continue to work outside the home. So here's my question: can you be a part-time radical homemaker? Because if not there's nothing especially radical at stake here. If only people who can afford a profitable farm can do it, what are the rest of us to do?