Jeremy Clarkson, 62, claimed his local Oxfordshire council banned him from selling his book Diddly Squat: A Year On The Farm, arguing that it isn't produced locally.
Jeremy, on the other hand, has hit back that he wrote it at his kitchen table.The former Top Gear host had been keen to flog copies of the book, which details his journey starting a farm from scratch, with no previous experience, onsite.However, he was apparently given a firm "no" to the proposal.Yet Jeremy insisted that he wrote it on the premises of the farm itself, exclaiming: "You can't get more local than that!""I cannot understand why the council doesn't want me to sell my farming books in the shop," the frustrated star elaborated."They claim they weren't made locally but I wrote them at my kitchen table."He added to the Daily Mail: "It would be helpful if we could sell a few T-shirts too."A spokesman for West Oxfordshire District Council has claimed he is unaware of any enforcement action preventing him from carrying out his plan.However, he reasoned: "A farm shop is for the sale of local produce.
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