The Wild Places | 
enlarge | Author: Robert Macfarlane Publisher: Granta Books Category: Book
Buy New: $18.97
New (6) Used (8) from $18.02
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1801549
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 340 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 6.1 x 1.5
ISBN: 1862079412 EAN: 9781862079410 ASIN: 1862079412
Publication Date: January 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Good Condition, delivery time 10 to 12 Working days, via Priority airmail from UK
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description "The Wild Places" is both an intellectual and a physical journey, and Macfarlane travels in time as well as space. Guided by monks, questers, scientists, philosophers, poets and artists, both living and dead, he explores our changing ideas of the wild. From the cliffs of Cape Wrath, to the holloways of Dorset, the storm-beaches of Norfolk, the saltmarshes and estuaries of Essex, and the moors of Rannoch and the Pennines, his journeys become the conductors of people and cultures, past and present, who have had intense relationships with these places. Certain birds, animals, trees and objects - snow-hares, falcons, beeches, crows, suns, white stones - recur, and as it progresses this densely patterned book begins to bind tighter and tighter. At once a wonder voyage, an adventure story, an exercise in visionary cartography, and a work of natural history, "The Wild Places" is written in a style and a form as unusual as the places with which it is concerned. It also tells the story of a friendship, and of a loss. It mixes history, memory and landscape in a strange and beautiful evocation of wildness and its vital importance.
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| Customer Reviews:
beautiful evocation of a disappearing landscape August 10, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I love books about travel, esp in Britain, and I love nature. So I thought this book might be the perfect match. I was not disappointed! First, the book is filled with detailed descriptions of what he is seeing, so that you are seeing it too. His writing reminds me much of Chet Raymo's. I was esp fascinated with the map he made of the wild areas he is exploring. Its a map that doesn't look like any you've ever seen. But it connects all of the places he is visiting, and shows how all of these places are indeed connected. The book isn't all nature - he weaves in local history, interesting people, and stories along the way. I'd recommend this to anyone interested in the topic. My only complaint is that the book is making me want to return to that land, and thats just not going to happen any time soon! But I took that trip vicariously thanks to his writting.
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