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Local by Alastair Humphreys

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

The travel adverts that fill our media after the excesses of Christmas are there to seduce us into travelling to these beautiful places, with the promise of making your life rich with experiences. There are those who would rather strike out on their own, venturing to places around the world that do not have a mass tourist industry, with the hope of finding something for the inner spirit.

Humphreys is one of those latter people. One of his first big adventures was to cycle all around the world (both books on his journey are great by the way) and he has walked around Spain in the footsteps of Laurie Lee whilst badly playing a violin. He is also a great advocate for micro adventures, short travels and adventures that take a day or a few hours and are there to enrich your life, without draining your wallet. This book is a follow-on from that.

The basic principle is that he wanted to stay local and discover all there is to find within a short distance from his home. He bought a map centred on his home from the OS that covered 20 km by 20 km and looked at the squares it was divided up into and decided to visit each one square kilometre on a day when he was free.

Like anyone who has lived in the same area for a reasonable period of time, you tend to think that you know your locale well. Well, as Humphreys found out, I bet that you don’t. This journey of very little distance would take him back in time, to relics from the war, he discovers something called a denehole and decides to see what is inside. He passes through housing estates, and graveyards and admires the ancient yews that add a certain gravitas to the place.

He comes across tiny cottages tucked away in woods he didn’t know existed, tries a spot of mudlarking and delights in the return of the swifts. Not every discovery is pleasant, there are burnt-out cars, fly-tipping and He is continually appalled by the litter scattered all over the place and ends up collecting bagfuls to dispose of properly. There is the odd surreal discovery too, a stuffed toy in the fork of a tree, is it there for a parent to rediscover, or as a symbol of some form? He also discovers in his 20Km by 20Km area that he can’t go everywhere, he finds lots of keep-out signs some of which he chooses to ignore..

Not only did I find this a really enjoyable read, but I think it highlights something that we probably all need to do more of, by acting locally and thinking globally and not consuming vast amounts of resources just because we can. As Humphreys shows in all of the chapters in this book there are countless things that can be discovered pretty much on your doorstep. And I would hazard a guess that like he found, there are things that you had no idea existed near you.

Humphreys writes with a self-depreciating humour and a sense of wonder in almost everything that he sees or looks at. But coupled with this is the fury that he has with the way that the planet in general and his local area, in particular, is being treated. It might not be something that some readers want to hear, but it does need to be said. If you want a very different sort of travel book and one that you can use as a springboard to find out what is in your local area then this is a really good place to start.

The Ghost In Ivy Barn by Mark Stay

4 out of 5 stars

As the Battle of Britain rages over the village of Woodville. Several planes have crashed and one of the villagers has been keeping parts of them in one of his barns. He is terrified when he realises that there is a poltergeist who is flinging the debris about in it. The three witches use a spell to realise the spirit. It is as they are leaving, Faye turns to see another ghost in the barn still, an airman who is scared on his face.

The three witches are visited by the leader of the Council of High Witches. It is a warlock, called Bellamy, The previous incumbent has been removed following the events covered in the previous book. He is there to ask the three witches to join him in casting a spell to stop the probable Nazi invasion.

They are going to be joined by witches from all over the country to create this cone of power and to gain maximum power for the spell tells them they will need to be skyclad. The witches are more than happy to help, but if he thinks they are getting their kit off, he has another thing coming…

These are a nice easy read and this is another enjoyable book in the series. The plot is not overly complex, and there are little subplots going on that have carried on from the previous books. I think that I worked out some of the essential plot pointss earlier in the book. It didn’t spoil it for me though. Being a series, I kind of know that everything is going to be okay, but there is a certain amount of jeopardy in the journey to the conclusion which I think makes for entertaining reading. Looking forward to the next one which I have just got out of the library.

Coast Of Teeth By Tom Skyes & Louis Netter

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Being an island nation we have had to get used to invaders that have regularly turned up over the past 2000 years. Most of them haven’t been particularly friendly, the Vikings spring to mind. This threat of ‘invasion’, especially those in ‘small boats’ fuelled by certain papers and politicians, coupled with the fact that most coastal towns and villages are run down or tired then these factors may be why most people in these places voted for Brexit.

This book is a tour of some of the coastal towns around the UK. It is not extensive and both the author and the illustrator visited the places together after the pandemic lockdowns to get a feel for the places and to do some people watching. They begin their journey in the English Riveria. The town of Torquay is haunted by the spectre of Faulty towers and isn’t quite what it used to be though, and feels like it is full of Little Britain bigotry. It has lost some of its charm
Weston Super-Mare is a place that I have only ever been to once. I can’t remember how old I was, but all I remember was the mud glistening in the sun and the tide went out. It was the place that Banksy chose for his theme park, Dismaland with his particular take on the English seaside.

Quite who was taking the piss out of whom has not been determined… In the time of Covid restrictions though, normal seaside activities are not happening, the donkeys that would have been plodding up and down the beach aren’t there.
Sandbanks is quite a place. It is dripping with money and should you have any desire to live there you will need a large fortune, but anyone can turn up and enjoy the beach and the views over the Purbecks and Old Harry Rocks. Just along the coast, Boscombe is a complete contrast. It has had money poured into it, but it still feels slightly seedy and rundown, but it does now have a gastropub. The pier here is a beautiful minimalist design and is a favourite of mine. Sykes mentions something here that I have never really noticed before, that almost all the benches have memorials on them, unlike other countries. As they head towards Christchurch, they find anti-vax slogans alongside the benches, the irony is not lost on the author, that these people lived long enough to be remembered because of the vaccination programmes of the 20th century. From Sandbanks one end, at the opposite end of the bay are the most expensive beach huts in the UK.

And so to Essex, a county that is often unfairly defined by its derogatory stereotypes. Clacton is drab and artificially lit by amusement arcades. They find a pub, that is allegedly the worst in the country, but they feel that have been in worse before. The mediocre food isn’t really enhanced by the karaoke serenade they are treated too either… They move further along the coast to Jaywick, here it feels like a shanty town with the jerry-rigged houses and the slide downward is very visible here. Sykes ponders if it is a precursor to the economic Brexit slide, though there is a glimmer of hope he sees in the Happy Club and its bartering system.

Sykes heads to his home patch of Portsmouth for the next journey. He recommends that it is always worth looking down, not just to avoid stepping in anything nasty, but so you can spot the engravings, inscriptions and other man-made items embedded in the ground. He marvels at the attempts to make Gosport a seaside town, whilst the industrial past and present loom over in a slightly threatening way. Even though Portsmouth has a long history, sometimes he has to look really far to see it. On a more positive note, the city has gone from being a cultural desert and a place to catch the clap to a place that is forging its own new identity.
The beach at Milton has its own strand line of plastic debris and other detritus and is not as salubrious as Sandbanks… The sluice gate is packed with rubbish and other junk, in a nasty tribute to the glamour of capitalism that is Gunwharf Keys. But one man’s junk is another man’s treasure, and his beachcomber friend, Dan, collects this junk, with the hope of finding something interesting.

Hayling Island is not quite an island, he could drive onto it, but chooses to take the ferry. Sykes has mixed memories of the place and visiting again, brings them flooding back. It was where his grandparents lived, but his uncles and aunts have less fond memories of their upbringing. They lived in poverty, surviving on benefits and budget clothing and where a treat was a trip to the funfair.

Another branch of Sykes’s family comes from Yorkshire. His grandfather joined the navy, hence why they ended up living in Portsmouth, but he feels a trip back there is due. He begins in Robin Hood bay, in a mostly left-wing county, it has been a Tory stronghold for almost a century now. It feels very different to the seaside town of the south and is discombobulating for him. Whilst in the area he feels that they should visit Whitby. He likes its unique culture and it has become a place of homage to Dracula, even though he is barely there in the book. It has expanded from that now, but don’t tell the goths, and this is the place where he eats the best fish and chips of the trip.

The first pub that they enter in Scarborough has a very disturbing political bent and so they head to the possibly wrongly named Grand Hotel. It may have been at one point, but isn’t now… They take a wander up the headland, past the bowling green. A waitress describes the place as dead, but as they have found with all the places they have visited, there is life if you know where to look.

A tour of the seaside towns of the UK wouldn’t really be a full tour if you didn’t go to Blackpool. It once was the pinnacle of the British seaside resorts, and whilst it still has it, some of the glamour has faded. They walk the sights and see the lights, have a go at bingo and partake in a mini pub crawl. It isn’t as run down as other towns they have visited, it still draws a fair number of visitors, but there is a seedy side that they come across. It seems to be holding its history well and seems to be in a good position to move forward.

I really liked this book. The mix of forensic observation of people by Sykes and the sketches by the very talented Louis Netter makes for a very unusual book indeed. But it works, or at least it did for me. I think that the reason for that is that they travelled to all of the locations in the book together and they have a certain dynamic that works really well. These dual views of what was happening around them are expertly portrayed in the art and the words. If you want to read a very different travelogue of Britain then this is a brilliant place to start.

My Books of 2023

2023 was a strange year with several significant events taking place, most notably Sarah being given the all-clear from breast cancer. I didn’t have quite as many five-star reads as normal, either from the 190 books that I read. First up are some honourable mentions that I gave 4.5 stars to:

Restoring The Wild: Sixty Years of Rewilding Our Skies, Woods and Waterways – Roy Dennis

Hothouse Earth: An Inhabitant’s Guide – Bill McGuire

England on Fire: A Visual Journey through Albion’s Psychic Landscape – Stephen Ellcock& Mat Osman

The Bookseller’s Tale – Martin Latham

Nomad Century: How to Survive the Climate Upheaval – Gaia Vince

Two Lights: Walking through Landscapes of Loss and Life – James Roberts

One Place De L’Eglise: A Year Or Two In A French Village – Trevor Dolby

Notes from the Cévennes: Half a Lifetime in Provincial France – Adam Thorpe

The Serpent Coiled in Naples – Marius Kociejowski

The Lost Rainforests Of Britain – Guy Shrubsole

Rosewater – Tade Thompson

Taking Flight: A Celebration Of The Miraculous Phenomenon Of Flight – Lev Parikian

Real Dorset – Jon Woolcott

Between The Chalk And The Sea: A Journey On Foot Into The Past – Gail Simmons

Grounding: Finding Home In A Garden – Lulah Ellender

The Language of Trees: How Trees Make Our World, Change Our Minds and Rewild Our Lives – Katie Holten

La Vie: A Year In Rural France – John Lewis-Stempel

Wild About Dorset: The Nature Diary of a West Country Parish – Brian Jackman

Ravenous: How To Get Ourselves And Our Planet Into Shape – Henry Dimbleby

High Caucasus: A Mountain Quest In Russia’s Haunted Hinterland – Tom Parfitt

Rural: The Lives Of The Working Class Countryside – Rebecca Smith

Grounded: A Journey Into The Landscapes Of Our Ancestors – James Canton

The Granite Kingdom: A Cornish Journey – Tim Hannigan

Life At Full Tilt: The Selected Writings of Dervla Murphy Dervla Murphy – Ed. Ethel Crowley

Singing Like Larks: A Celebration Of Birds In Folk Songs – Andrew Millham

Feather, Leaf, Bark & Stone – Jackie Morris

 

And here are my five-star reads:

Eating to Extinction: The World’s Rarest Foods and Why We Need to Save Them – Dan Saladino

Under The Blue – Oana Aristide

The Lost Orchards: Rediscovering The Forgotten Cider Apples Of Dorset – Liz Copas & Nick Poole

Undercurrent: A Cornish Memoir Of Poverty, Nature And Resilience – Natasha Carthew

The Swimmer: The Wild Life Of Roger Deakin – Patrick Barkham

Seriously Funny: The Endlessly Quotable Terry Pratchett – Terry Pratchett

And My Book of the Year:

Bibliomaniac: An Obsessive’s Tour Of The Bookshops Of Britain – Robin Ince

Favourite Covers of 2023

Of all the 190 books that I have read in 2023, these are the ones that had covers that I liked the most. They are in no particular order and my favourite is at the bottom.

And my favourite cover of 2023 is:

Are there any of those that you like? Or do you have a cover from this year’s reading that really stood out to you? Let me know in the comments below.

2023 Book Stats

I finished 190 books in 2023, the same as 2022 and many other years previously. I did reach my Good Reads Target again.  Here are my stats for the last year’s reading.

My total pages read was 49071 50636  (1565 pages less than last year!) and my monthly average of books was 15.8 again. This broke down into these monthly totals:

January – 18
February – 15
March – 18
April – 15
May – 16
June – 17
July – 16
August – 16
September – 14
October – 16
November – 15
December – 14

Author Splits

Male – 112
Female – 78 (41% of the total)
BAME – 15 (My target was 12)

Sources

Review – 54

Library – 77

Own – 58

 

Genre

Non-Fiction – 124

Fiction – 48

Poetry – 18

 

Random Stats

Longest Book: Gnomon – Nick Harkaway – 688 pages

Shortest Book: The Last Hedgehog – Pam Ayres – 48 pages

The total cost of the books read was £2908.17

 

Most Read Author

Mark Stay with five books read

 

Stars Awarded

5 Stars – 7
4.5 Stars – 26
4 Stars – 48
3.5 Stars – 66
3 Stars – 30
2.5 Stars – 10
2 Stars – 3
1.5 Stars 0
1 Star 0

 

Genres

I use a spreadsheet to keep a note of the types and genres of books that I read. These are detailed below:

Fiction 29
Natural History 25
Travel 23
Poetry 18
Memoir 13
Fantasy 12
History 8
Science Fiction 7
Art 5
Politics 5
Science 4
Environmental 4
Miscellaneous 3
Photography 3
Archaeology 2
Dorset 2
Books 2
Maths 2
Technology 2
Britain 2
Gardening 2
Social History 2
Economics 2
Weather 2
Mental Health 2
True Crime 1
Transport 1
Food 1
Biography 1
Landscape 1
Architecture 1
Humour 1
Geology 1
Folklore 1

 

Publishers

These are the number of books read by each publisher. Amazingly I read books from 99 different publishers. William Collins were top last year. Only four of the top ten were independent this year, something that I need to address in 2024!

Faber & Faber 12
Simon & Schuster 7
Bloomsbury 6
William Collins 6
Penguin 6
Little Toller 6
Jonathan Cape 5
Elliott & Thompson 5
Reaktion Books 4
Headline 4
Doubleday 4
Picador 4
Michael Joseph 3
Granta 3
Bradt 3
Monoray 3
Penned In The Margins 3
Allen Lane 3
Profile 3
Chatto & Windus 3
Eland 3
Saraband 2
Melville House 2
Hamish Hamilton 2
Fum D’Estamps Press 2
Orbit 2
Seren Press 2
Summersdale 2
Chelsea Green 2
Canongate 2
Particular Books 2
Unbound 2
W&N 2
4th Estate 2
Sceptre 2
Hodder & Stoughton 2
Abacus 2
David & Charles 1
Reflex Press 1
Harper North 1
Serpent’s Tail 1
Jo Fletcher 1
Gestalten 1
Salt Press 1
Haus Publishing 1
Signal Press 1
Watkins Publishing 1
Ebury Press 1
Icon Books 1
Chroma Editions 1
Janus Publishing 1
Pan Macmillan 1
William Heinemann 1
Sandstone Press 1
Flint 1
HarperCollins 1
Basic Books 1
National Trust 1
Calon Books 1
The History Press 1
Duckworth 1
Veloce 1
Salt 1
Virago 1
Orion Books 1
Quercus 1
Galley Beggars 1
Fitzcarraldo Editions 1
Orion 1
Jo Fletcher Books 1
Gollancz 1
MacLehose Press 1
Peepal Tree Press 1
Watkin Art 1
Transworld 1
Yale University Press 1
Out-Spoken Press 1
Three Rivers Press 1
John Murray 1
Vintage 1
Bardwell Press 1
Head of Zeus 1
Halsgrove 1
Influx Press 1
Peepal Press 1
McCleland & Stewart 1
Hurst Publishers 1
Atlantic Books 1
Fly On The Wall 1
Duckworth Books 1
British Library Publishing 1
Open Pen 1
September Publishing 1
Luath Press Ltd 1
Telegram Books 1
Canterton Books 1
Allison and Busby 1
Arrow Books 1
Red Dog Books 1

 

December 2023 Review

For a long month, December always seems to go so fast. With all the things going on, I have never really seemed to have as much time to read as I want, but I did manage to finish my Good Reads challenge of 190 books again. To reach that total I had 14 books to finish, and here they all are:

Books Read

Malarkoi – Alex Pheby – 3.5 Stars

Winter’s Gifts – Ben Aaronovitch – 3.5 Stars

The Holly King – Mark Stay – 4 Stars

Shitstorm – Fernando Sdrigotti – 3.5 Stars

Travellers Through Time: A Gypsy History – Jeremy Harte – 4 Stars

I Hate Christmas: A Manifesto for the Modern-day Scrooge – Daniel Blythe – 2.5 Stars

The Lost Flock: Rare Wool, Wild Isles and One Woman’s Journey to Save Scotland’s Original Sheep – Jane Cooper – 3.5 Stars

Soundings: Journeys In The Company Of Whales – Doreen Cunningham – 3 Stars

Wild Isles – Patrick Barkham & Alastair Fothergill – 3.5 Stars

Yew – Fred Hageneder – 4 Stars

The Last Hedgehog – Pam Ayres & Alice Tait (Ill) – 3.5 Stars

Nature Tales for Winter Nights – Ed. Nancy Campbell – 3.5 Stars

Wild Wanderings – Phil Gribbon – 3 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

This is a stunning book of art and poetry. Well

Feather, Leaf, Bark & Stone – Jackie Morris – 4.5 Stars

 

Top Genres

Fiction – 29

Natural History – 25

Travel – 23

Poetry – 18

Memoir – 13

Fantasy – 11

History – 8

Science Fiction – 7

Art – 5

Politics – 5

 

Top Publishers

Faber & Faber – 12

Simon & Schuster – 7

Bloomsbury – 6

William Collins – 6

Penguin – 6

Little Toller – 6

Jonathan Cape – 5

Elliott & Thompson – 5

Reaktion Books – 4

Headline – 4

 

Review Copies Received

Circles of Stone: Weird Tales of Pagan Sites and Ancient Rites: 44 – Ed. Katy Soar

Roads of Destiny: And Other Tales of Alternative Histories and Parallel Realms – Ed. Alasdair Richmond

The House Divided: Sunni, Shia and the Making of the Middle East – Barnaby Rogerson

 

Library Books Checked Out

Elixir: In The Valley At The End Of Time – Kapka Kassobova

A Year in the Life: Adventures in British Subcultures – Lucy Leonelli

Sixty Harvests Left: How to Reach a Nature-Friendly Future – Philip Lymbery

Abroad in Japan: Ten Years In The Land Of The Rising Sun – Chris Broad

 

Books Bought

You Took the Last Bus Home – Brian Bilston

Orwell’s Roses – Rebecca Solnit

Homage to Barcelona – Colm Toibin

The Nightingale – Sam Lee

The Elder Edda – Unknown

The Peace Of Wild Things – Wendell Berry

Hermit – Jade Angeles Fitton

Dorset’s World Heritage Coast: An Archaeological Guide – John Beavis

The Greek Islands – Lawrence Durrell

In Search Of England – H.V. Morton

The Oatmeal Ark: From the Western Isles to a Promised Sea – Rory MacLean

The Time-travelling Caveman – Terry Pratchett

Legends & Folklore Dorset – Andrew Caffrey

Why Women Grow – Alice Vincent

The Road to McCarthy – Pete McCarthy

Earth Memories – Llewelyn Powys

The Mirror Of The Sea – Joseph Conrad

The Man Who Planted Trees – Jean Giono, Harry Brockway (Ill) & Aline Giono

Lev’s Violin: An Italian Adventure – Helena Attlee

Danziger’s Adventures: From Miami to Kabul – Nick Danziger

 

So any from that huge list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

My 2024 Reading Intentions

2024 Intentions

 

Blogging

As I have said before, I have always tended to think of myself as a reader who blogs rather than just a book blogger. This is shaping how I blogged last year and even more so in this coming year. I will be scaling back the number of books that I will be reading and reviewing this year because of a mini-family crisis that needs some of my attention.

 

Books

Review Books

I am forever grateful for every single review copy that I receive. I am making a concerted plan to work through all of the review books that I have been sent and much reducing the number that I request still further. That said, I would be delighted to receive some of the books that were on my anticipated list

 

My Own Books

I have been cataloguing the books that I have in the past few months, and have found several duplicates, some of which I have passed on and others will be given away on social media channels occasionally. I have passed 2000 books so far and have a growing list of books that I want to read and pass on.

 

Library Books

I have managed to reduce the number of books that I have out from the library and on one card even got down to half full! But I know that I can do better on this and I am aiming to have only one shelf of library books. I am not that far off achieving this.

 

Reading Plans

I am fairly happy with the mix of books that I am reading at the moment. I feel that I got the balance right between travel writing and natural history books last year, but as these ake up the bulk of my collection, then I want to read more of them. I also want to read more science fiction and fiction, because, hey, why not? I also have some other intentions detailed below, that whilst not set in stone, I would like to achieve.

 

Female Authors

I am going to keep my target of reading women authors at 40% for 2024.

 

BAME Authors

I had my target set to 12 last year and I am going to set the same again for 2024. Slowly more BAME authors are being commissioned in the genres that I like reading, but it is sadly too few still.

 

Science Fiction & Fantasy

Aiming again to average at least one a month for this. Science fiction is good for expanding the mind and as Terry Pratchett says: Fantasy is an exercise bicycle for the mind. It might not take you anywhere, but it tones up the muscles that can.

 

Fiction

I don’t read or buy a huge amount of fiction, but I do have a lot around that I have acquired or been sent. This year I am going to make an effort to read at least one fiction book a month. I probably won’t review them, but it depends on the book.

 

Poetry

I am aiming to read one poetry book a month this year.

 

Photobooks

I have bought an awful lot of art & photobooks in the past two years and I want to read some of these books next year. Aiming to read at least around six of these in 2024.

 

Literary Awards

Last year I was a bit better at reading some of the shortlisted books from my favourite prizes (as usual). I did manage to read some from the minor prizes too, but still have a long list of books that I haven’t quite got to read yet… The same list of prizes from last year:

Wainwright

Stanford

Royal Society

Baillie Gifford

Arthur C Clarke

I would like to read some of the winners from other prizes too, including:

The Republic Of Consciousness Prize

Rathbones Folio Prize

Women’s Prize for Fiction

Jhalak Prize

The Portico Prize

 

Challenges

I quite like book challenges. It is a way of finding new books that you might not have come across before to fit a particular brief. It kind of follows my philosophy of reading widely and reading deeply.

 

The World From My Armchair Challenge

My ongoing challenge is to read a travel book set in or that passes through every country, sea and ocean in the world. I did really badly at this last year as I only read one book (!!!) for the challenge. Aiming to read at least twelve for this and there will be an update on a blog post sometime in February.

 

Nature Challenge

There is no challenge this year for the Nature group that I am in so I will roll over the books that I didn’t read to this years reading to complete it.

 

20 Books of Summer

This is run by the blogger, Cathy of 746 books. I normally sign up to read 20 books and will do so again this summer. Last year was the first time I completed it too!

 

Other Bookish Stuff

Cataloguing Books

I have started cataloguing my books now. I have catalogued five bookcases and have five more to go, plus the piles that are scattered hither and thither around the house. So far I have 2150 books and actual shelf locations for about half of them. In the end, I decided on a spreadsheet rather than using an app. I have found several duplicates and these have been passed on. Around 10% of my collection is signed too, I hadn’t realised that I had so many books scribbled in by the author.

 

Spreadsheets

I wrote about this back in 2023 here. I have now made further refinements and will write another post about these changes later in the year. So far these changes seem to be an improvement on what I have used up until now.

 

Bookshelves

I wrote a blog post showing all my shelves here. I have drawn up a plan for what genre of books that I want on which shelf, and this will be implemented following me reading a clearing out a fair number of books. There will be a mid-stage post later in the year when I have made significant progress on tiding up!

 

January 2024 TBR

Here is my January TBR. It is much shorter than normal, because of reasons that I mention in another post that I am still writing at the moment.

 

Still Reading

Ravilious & Co: The Pattern Of Friendship – Andy Friend

Endurance: 100 Tales Of Survival, Endurance And Exploration –  Ed. Levison Wood

Nature Writing for Every Day of the Year – Ed. Jane McMorland Hunter

 

Other Books

Hemingway’s Chair Michael Palin

And The Mountains Echoed Khaled Hosseini

 

Review Books

Crawling Horror: Creeping Tales of the Insect Weird Ed. Daisy Butcher & Janette Leaf

Cornish Horrors: Tales from the Land’s End Ed. Joan Passey

On Writing and Failure Stephen Marche

Local: A Search for Nearby Nature and Wildness Alastair Humphreys

Scenes from Prehistoric Life: From the Ice Age to the Coming of the Romans – Francis Pryor

Bloom: From Food to Fuel, the Epic Story of How Algae Can Save Our World – Ruth Kassinger

 

Poetry

A Local Habitation Norman Nicholson

 

Library Books

Elixir : In The Valley At The End Of Time Kapka Kassobova

Vuelta Skelter: Riding The Remarkable 1941 Tour Of Spain Tim Moore

The Turning Tide: A Biography Of The Irish Sea Jon Gower

Any that you have come across before? Or would like to read your self? Let me know in the comments below

Anticipated Books for Spring 2024

As usual, I have scoured the catalogues for all the books that pique my attention I only managed to find 16 catalogues this time, so this may be updated as the others are published. So without further ado, here are the books:

 

Bloomsbury

Vulture Capitalism – Grace Blakeley

How To Be A Citizen – C.L. Skatch

Wild Service – Nick Hayes

Cold Kitchen – Caroline Eden

On This Holy Island – Oliver Smith

Cypria – Alex Christofi

The Tomb Of The Mili Mongga – Samuel Turvey

Warming Up – Madeline Orr

Potholes & Pavements – Laura Laker

Groundbreakers – Chantal Lyons

Cull Of The Wild – Hugh Warwick

Wild Woman – Philippa Forrester

Stowaway – Joe Shute

 

Bodley Head

Great Britain?: How To Get Our Future Back – Torsten Bell

 

Canongate

Poyums – Len Pennie

Between Britain: Walking The History Of England And Scotland – Alistair Moffat

We Are Electric; The New Science Of Our Body’S Electrome – Sally Adee

Your Wild And Precious Life: On Grief, Hope And Rebellion – Liz Jensen

The Laws Of Connection: The Transformative Science Of Being Social – David Robson

 

Chatto & Windus

Not The End Of The World: How We Can Be The First Generation To Build A Sustainable Planet – Hannah Ritchie

 

Chelsea Green

Hedgelands – Christopher Hart

 

Duckworth

The Lost Carving: A Journey To The Heart Of Making – David Esterley

The Case For Nature: Pioneering Solutions For The Other Planetary Crisis – Siddarth Shrikanth

Understorey: A Year Among Weeds – Anna Chapman Parker

 

Elliott & Thompson

Sunken Lands – Gareth E. Rees

In All Weathers – Matt Gaw

The Way Through The Woods – Rebecca Beattie

Infinite Life – Jules Howard

This Allotment – Ed. Sarah Rigby

Radical Rest – Evie Muir

A Day In The Life Of The Green Economy – Dharshini David

The Centre Must Hold – Ed. Yair Zivan

 

Eye Books

Local – Alastair Humphreys

 

Faber & Faber

The Rising Down: Lives In An East Sussex Landscape – Alexandra Harris

How To Win An Information War: The Propagandist Who Outwitted Hitler – Peter Pomerantsev

The Vast Extent – Lavinia Greenlaw

The City Of Today Is A Dying Thing – Des Fitzgerald

Back To The Local – Maurice Gorham & Edward Ardizzone

Blossomise – Simon Armitage Ill. Angela Harding

 

Fitzcarraldo Editions

The Observable Universe – Heather Mccalden

 

Granta

All Before Me: A Search For Belonging In Wordsworth’S Lake District – Esther Rutter

The Flitting – Ben Masters

 

Headline

Who Owns This Sentence? – David Bellos And Alexandra Montagu

Kersten’s Lists – François Kersaudy

A History Of The World In 47 Borders – Jonn Elledge

Lvoe Ii – Atticus Poetry

Return Of The Aubergine – Sophie Grigson

 

Hurst

The Algorithm: How Ai Can Hijack Your Career And Steal Your Future – Hilke Schellmann

Orwell’S Ghosts: Wisdom And Warnings For The 21St Century – Laura Beers

Sorry For The Inconvenience But This Is An Emergency: The Nonviolent Struggle For Our Planet’S Futur – Lynne Jones

The Great Indian Food Trip: Around A Subcontinent À La Carte – Zac O’Yeah

Italy In A Wineglass: The Taste Of History – Marc Millon

 

Jonathan Cape

Rapture’s Road – Seán Hewitt

The Book Forger – Joseph Hone

Ruin, Blossom – John Burnside

The Book-Makers: A History Of The Book In 18 Remarkable Lives – Adam Smyth

The Roads To Rome: A History – Catherine Fletcher

 

Little Toller

Set My Hand Upon The Plough – Enid Barraud

 

Octopus Books

I Can Hear the Cuckoo – Kiran Sidhu

 

Oneworld

Who Owns The Moon? :In Defence Of Humanity’S Common Interests In Space – A.C. Grayling

 

Profile Books

Exhausted: An A–Z For The Weary – Anna Katharina Schaffner

The House Divided: Sunni, Shia And Conflict In The Middle East – Barnaby Rogerson

The Language Puzzle: How We Talked Our Way Out Of The Stone Age – Steven Mithen

The Return Of The Grey Partridge Restoring Nature On The South Downs – Roger Morgan-Grenville And Edward Norfolk

Possible: 16 Ways To Net Zero – Chris Goodall

In The Long Run The Future As A Political Idea – Jonathan White

The High Seas: Ambition, Power And Greed On The Unclaimed Ocean – Olive Heffernan

Rumbles: A Curious History Of The Gut – Elsa Richardson

The New Breadline: Hunger And Hope In The Twenty-First Century – Jean-Martin Bauer

Amuse Bouche: How To Eat Your Way Around France – Carolyn Boyd

The Accidental Garden – Richard Mabey

 

Quercus

Four Shots In The Night – Henry Hemming

Riding Route 66: Find Myself On America’S Mother Road – Henry Cole

My Family And Other Seedlings: A Year On A Dorset Allotment – Lally Snow

 

Reaktion Books

Saving The World: How Forests Inspired Global Efforts To Stop Climate Change From 1770 To The Present – Brett M. Bennett And Gregory A. Barton

All Mapped Out: How Maps Shape Us – Mike Duggan

Behind The Privet Hedge: Richard Sudell, The Suburban Garden And The Beautification Of Britain – Michael Gilson

Who Killed Cock Robin?: British Folk Songs Of Crime And Punishment – Stephen Sedley And Martin Carthy

 

Riverrun

Every Living Thing: The Great And Deadly Race To Know All Life – Jason Roberts

 

Salt

Shadow Lines – Nicholas Royle

 

Sort Of Books

Cairn – Kathleen Jamie

 

There are some really good books coming out and if I had to say which one I am most excited about it would have to be Kathleen Jamie’s.

Any here that you like the look of? Let me know in the comments below.

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