Down to Earth

Down to Earth

2000 • Comedy, Drama
Down to Earth was a BBC One television series first broadcast in 2000 about a couple who start a new life on a Devon farm. The early episodes of the series were based on a series of books written by Faith Addis about their real-life move from London to Devon. The music in the series was composed by Sheridan Tongue, and had the song "After All this Time" as its opening and closing credits in series 2 and 3.

Why you should read the novel

If you loved the BBC series, read the original Down to Earth book by Faith Addis for the authentic, first‑person voice behind the story. Her memoir delivers intimate detail, humor, and heart that television can only hint at, capturing the real rhythms of rural Devon life. On the page, you get the complete picture: the practical challenges, small triumphs, financial worries, and community connections that shaped the move from city to countryside. It’s a richer, deeper narrative, perfect for fans of uplifting British countryside stories and true‑life memoirs. Choose the book to experience the moments and reflections the cameras couldn’t show. The Down to Earth memoir offers scene‑setting, sensory detail, and candid insights—SEO‑friendly essentials for readers searching for the original source material and a more rewarding, long‑form read.

Adaptation differences

Book versus series: the Down to Earth TV adaptation shapes a lived memoir into season‑friendly drama. The book unfolds as candid, episodic reflections, while the show builds tighter plot arcs and cliff‑hangers to fit broadcast structure and audience expectations. Characters and community are streamlined and expanded on screen. The series often condenses or combines real people into composite characters, introduces new villagers to drive weekly stories, and swaps internal monologue for dialogue and set‑piece scenes. This amplifies conflict and humor while inevitably trimming nuanced personal observations from the memoir. Timelines are compressed. Multi‑year adjustments to country living in the book may be re‑ordered or squeezed into a single storyline for pace. Certain incidents are heightened, simplified, or repositioned to create clear turning points, holiday specials, and emotionally satisfying episode endings. Tone and focus differ. The memoir leans into practical detail, self‑doubt, learning curves, and the quiet wins of smallholding; the series emphasizes family drama, community subplots, and visually engaging challenges. Expect gentler, introspective passages on the page, and more overt, episodic stakes on screen.

Down to Earth inspired from

Down to Earth
by Faith Addis