Travel and holiday Books
Low Price Publications Sikkim and Bhutan: Twenty-One Years on the
Book SynopsisThe text covers the geography, people, history, and expeditions in Sikhim and Bhutan, including early reminiscences, royal visits, and missions to Bhutan.
£8.99
The American University in Cairo Press A Morocco Anthology: Travel Writing Through the
Book SynopsisMorocco is a country that has been much invaded, much traveled though, and much written about in many languages. Positioned at the entrance to Africa—or the entrance to Europe—it has seen deep cultural cross-fertilization and the emergence of a very distinct culture at the threshold of two worlds. Its history is exciting and colorful; its ancient cities extraordinary in their preservation; and its people magnetic. It has drawn travelers and writers for many centuries, and continues to do so today, with the result that there exists a rich seam of description and sometimes quizzical (but generally very fond) appreciation, which Martin Rose, a long-time resident of the country, has been able to mine for this fascinating anthology.
£11.99
Eland Publishing Ltd Libyan Sands: Travel in a Dead World
Book Synopsis"Libyan Sands" is unmistakably the work of an Englishman, a modest, machine- and desert-loving young officer whose passionate amateur enthusiasm led to the exploration of the Egyptian western desert and the Libyan Sahara on the eve of the second world war.
£11.69
Eland Publishing Ltd Three Quarters of a Footprint
Book SynopsisJoe Roberts stayed for five months with the Trivedi family in Bangalore,while travelling all over southern India. Wherever he went he met extraordinary people, but these encounters take second place to his ripening friendship with the Trivedi family, and his exact chronicling of their neighbours.
£13.49
Avalon Travel Publishing Rick Steves Snapshot Hill Towns of Central Italy
Book SynopsisWith Rick Steves, central Italy is yours to discover! This slim guide excerpted from Rick Steves Italy includes: ·Rick's firsthand, up-to-date advice on the best sights, restaurants, hotels, and more in central Italy's hill towns, plus tips to beat the crowds, skip the lines, and avoid tourist traps ·Top sights and local experiences: Uncover Etruscan history in the beautifully preserved town of Voltera or relax while wine tasting in Montepulciano. Take a romantic stroll along Orvieto's ramparts, peruse medieval towers in San Gimignano, and indulge in delicious pici in Siena ·Helpful maps and self-guided walking tours to keep you on trackWith selective coverage and Rick's trusted insight into the best things to do and see, Rick Steves Snapshot Hill Towns of Central Italy is truly a tour guide in your pocket.Expanding your trip? Pick up Rick Steves Italy for comprehensive coverage, detailed itineraries, and essential information for planning a countrywide trip.
£9.49
HarperCollins Publishers Su Doku Challenge Book 1
Book SynopsisAre you up to the challenge of 200 new Su Doku puzzles, arranged in easy, medium and difficult categories?Keep your mind sharp and test your powers of deductive reasoning with these ever-popular number puzzles. Ideal for whiling away those long commutes, travelling on holiday or relaxing at home. The best value su doku puzzles around.
£5.99
HarperCollins Everything is Going to be Great
Book Synopsis“Shukert''s sharp comic turns careen smack into the middle of our hearts.— Los Angeles TimesFrom performer, playwright, comedian, author and writer and producer of Glow and Superirl Rachel Shukert, Everything Is Going to Be Great, is a hilarious memoir of traveling through Europe in her twenties. Rachel chronicles her youthful navigation through the haphazard fun and debauchery of new freedoms, and the growing pains that ultimately accompany “adulthood.” Fans of Sloane Crosley and David Sedaris are going to love Shulkert’s story, and her sharp, smart humor.
£9.49
Ebury Publishing A House in the High Hills Dreams and Disasters of
Book Synopsis''I was warned by all those who knew me that to take on a project like this was madness.''At the peak of her fast-paced career, presenter and interviewer Selina Scott bought a house in the Tramuntana hills of Mallorca. It was a dilapidated old farmhouse without even mains electricity or water, but she had fallen in love with the beauty and peace of the surroundings, and the promise of an escape from her high-pressured job and unwelcome tabloid attention.Selina begins to settle into Mediterranean life and spends time renovating the house. However, she soon realises that making the old house her home is going to be more difficult than she thought. From the unwelcome wildlife that insists on sharing her house, to dubious building work, locals both friendly and hostile, and a forest fire that threatens the whole valley, Selina''s new life is full of unexpected challenges. In this funny, elegantly written account of her Spanish years Selina tells us about tTrade ReviewShe records with a loving and observant eye * Telegraph *Charming * Sunday Express *A terrific read, beautifully written * Richard Madeley *
£14.24
Ebury Publishing Playing the Moldovans at Tennis
Book SynopsisTony Hawks lives in London. He leads a diverse life and has various 'jobs', such as performing stand up comedy, appearing as a panellist on TV and radio (Have I Got News For You, Just A Minute, I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue), acting, writing, playing tennis, and making music.Trade ReviewEven if you hate tennis and couldn't find Moldova on the map, you'll be charmed. Utterly recommended * FHM *Surprisingly touching as well as incredibly funny * The Oxford Times *I expected to find this book funny, which it is; I didn't expect to find it illuminating and rather moving, which it is too * Daily Mail *This immensely readable account, enriched with moments of true hilarity is, quite honestly, a bit of a gem * Living Abroad Magazine *
£14.24
Vintage Publishing Don Fernando
Book SynopsisConsidered by Graham Greene to be Maugham''s best work, Don Fernando is a paean to a golden age of enormous creative energy. It discusses the writings of St. Teresa and the paintings of El Greco, and comments with sagacity and wit on such illustrious figures as Cervantes, Velazquez and the creator of Don Juan. This vibrant assessment of a great people at their greatest hour is full of happy surprises, curious facts and stimulating opinions that reflect Maugham''s lifelong enchantment with the landscape and people of Spain.Trade ReviewMaugham's best travel book * Washington Post *One of the most under-rated writers of last century * Glasgow Herald *Maugham was one of the great masters of clever narrative and construction -- Allan MassieHe was a superb storyteller - one of the very best in our language - who wrote with a wordly, sardonic understanding of the human condition. * Daily Mail *
£9.49
Vintage Publishing On A Chinese Screen 1
Book SynopsisWilliam Somerset Maugham was born in 1874 and lived in Paris until he was ten. He was educated at King's School, Canterbury, and at Heidelberg University. He spent some time at St. Thomas' Hospital with the idea of practising medicine, but the success of his first novel, Liza of Lambeth, published in 1897, won him over to literature. Of Human Bondage, the first of his masterpieces, came out in 1915, and with the publication in 1919 of The Moon and Sixpence his reputation as a novelist was established. At the same time his fame as a successful playwright and writer was being consolidated with acclaimed productions of various plays and the publication of several short story collections. His other works include travel books, essays, criticism and the autobiographical The Summing Up and A Writer's Notebook. In 1927 Somerset Maugham settled in the South of France and lived there until his death in 1965Trade ReviewEvoke the nostalgic China of "old China hands," replete with rickshaws, coolies and singsing girls...satisfying accounts of the follies and foibles of the British diplomats and expatriates who stubbornly ignore the native culture and labor to create little enclaves of Chelsea and Soho in Asia * Los Angeles Times *Masterly...carefully wrought prose sketches...The magical, mysterious East is richly portrayed * Newsday *A fascinating volume - vivid, thoughtful, full of colour * New York Times *
£9.49
Penguin Books Ltd Trawler
Book SynopsisRedmond O''Hanlon describes his extraordinary three-week trip on an Orkney trawler as it journeys far into the north Atlantic in search of its catch. Young skipper Jason Schofield has a 2 million pound overdraft on his boat, the Norlantean, which is why he has to go out in a Category One Force 12 hurricane when the rest of the Scottish fleet has run for shelter. O''Hanlon may not be much help when it comes to seamanship - in the words of one of the crew, he doesn''t know his arse from his tit - but he is able to wax lyrical on the amazing deep-sea fish to be found north of the Wyville Thomson Ridge: greater argentine, flying squid, blue ling, the truly disgusting hagfish and many other exotics.Combining humour with erudition, O''Hanlon has written a vivid and compulsively readable account of a journey that for sheer terror beats all his previous adventures.
£999.99
Penguin Books Ltd A South Indian Journey
Book SynopsisMichael Wood, journalist, broadcaster and film-maker, has been acclaimed for his hugely popular BBC television series and the accompanying books: In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great and Conquistadors; the latest is India: a Journey in History.
£999.99
Penguin Books Ltd Venice An Interior
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewPublisher's description. A spell-binding literary journey through the ancient and timeless maze of Venice. With characteristic thoughtfulness and elegance, Marías captures this city of contradictions, where glamour and squalor are layered one atop the other, and the truly native Venetians are a rare and elusive tribe. * Penguin *
£6.00
Wild Sophia The Grail Rider
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£29.44
Princeton University Press Walk the Trails in and around Princeton
Book SynopsisThis is an attractive, pocket-friendly guide to walks on sixteen of the best trails through preserved open space in Princeton, New Jersey, and its neighboring towns. This revised edition includes eight new walks, several of which have been created on land that has been preserved since the popular guide was originally published in 2009. The walks ra
£17.26
John Murray Press In Search of the English Eccentric
Book SynopsisA witty anthropological journey in search of the quintessential English eccentric.Trade Review'A lovely, heartfelt paean to English eccentrics, by a member of the tribe. A funny, timely and moving encounter with a dying breed.' * Jon Ronson *The new Michael Palin * Tatler *'Hemming keeps up a stream of comic patter' * Guardian *'Hilarious' * Daily Mail *'Hemming makes some good points' * Sunday Telegraph/ Seven *'Hemming is a kindly collector and a champion of people who live as they see fit' * Metro *'Highly entertaining' * Traveller *'Intelligent and encouraging' * TLS *Hemming makes a convincing case for the ways in which eccentrics benefit any society or era * Financial Times *'If nothing else this book confirms the old adage "there's nothing so strange as folk" * Folkestone Herald & Dover Express *'Entertaining and thought-provoking ... Hemming unearths a surprisingly large array of delightfully odd characters' * Cambridge Evening News *
£11.69
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group Inc Best Easy Day Hikes Cape Cod and the Islands
Book SynopsisHikes varying from half-hour strolls to full-day adventures, this guidebook is for everyone, including families.
£7.59
Schiffer Publishing Ltd Coasting Around the UK Roller Coasters of the
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£25.59
Hippocrene Books Inc.,U.S. Footprints of Polonia
Book SynopsisTrade Review“Footprints of Polonia is an outstanding look at the way that Polish Americans have transformed America’s cities, suburbs, and towns. It is an essential guide to the physical impact of one of the country’s largest ethnic groups.” —Dominic A. Pacyga, author of American Warsaw: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of Polish Chicago"Poles have been building our country ever since Kosciuszko designed West Point. This is a story of great Polish American places of faith, fortune and fellowship." —Mark Dillon, 1st Vice President, American Council for Polish Culture“North America’s Polish heritage is not monolithic, nor can it be discovered and enjoyed on one trip, in a single place, or in a single day. This guide will facilitate your discovery of that legacy.” —Stanislaus A. Blejwas, from the prologue to the previous edition“Physical manifestations of belonging are important symbols and expressions of both continuity and discontinuity and create a sense of place for the Polish diaspora. This book aims to guide us through the process of cataloging, preserving, and understanding the past as well as celebrating and commemorating it.” —Anna D. Jaroszyńska-Kirchmann, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of History and CSU Professor, Eastern Connecticut State University
£16.49
MB - Cornell University Press The Birds of Ecuador
Book SynopsisVolume II, the field guide volume of this two-volume set, contains 96 full-color plates and facing pages of descriptive text, along with 115 silhouette outlines and nearly 1600 distribution maps.Trade ReviewThe Field Guide volume, 'intended primarily for field use,' contains plates, distribution maps, and text geared toward the identification of all the birds of Ecuador (excluding the Galapagos Islands). Its companion, Status, Distribution, and Taxonomy, suggested 'for your library (or hotel room or even car),' covers the occurrence and systematics of these same species. Undoubtedly, the field guide will be the volume most often consulted; an excellent aid for field identification of Ecuadorian birds, it will also be useful in much of Colombia, northern Peru, and western Brazil. Illustrations make or break a field guide. The 96 color plates, all by Greenfield, are vibrant, clear, and very effective. They depict nearly the entire avifauna, including migrants and species known in Ecuador only from a single record. They also show many rarely illustrated plumages (such as in the highly polymorphic hawks and eagles).... The Field Guide will be indispensable to all field biologists and birdwatchers visiting Ecuador and northwestern South America. * Science *What Ridgely and Greenfield have produced is arguably the most important publication on birds in the region since the appearance of Wetmore's... treatise on the birds of Panama a half-century ago.... The accounts are compacted but chock-full of information, covering status, habitat, field marks, similar species, habits, and voice. Despite the fact that this is a superb field guide,... it is the companion volume that elevates these books to a rarefied standing. This book consists of accounts for all the species in the field guide.... The second volume makes this set more than just a field guide and handbook. It makes it perhaps the single most important reference for students, professionals, and bird watchers interested in the birds of South America, one that will be a first source for decades. * Bird Watcher's Digest *Many of us can only long to travel to exotic birding places in South America,... but Ridgely and Greenfield live the dream and generously share it with us through their exquisite writings and paintings.... In summary, this is a thorough and thoughtful production that not only provides useful and complete information, but does so in a user-friendly manner.... The decades-long wait for these volumes has been worth it! * Birders Journal *The long awaited The Birds of Ecuador is finally out and the results are well worth the wait. The 2-volume set is a massive piece of work and the authors intended the 2-volume set to be used by both traveling birders and ornithologists.... Both volumes complement each other perfectly and are well worth the price. These volumes add tremendously to the available information of South American avifauna. * Surfbirds Book Reviews *This long awaited, monumental two volume set reveals the ornithological secrets and diversity of this small Latin American nation.... The two amassed so much information, they could not fit it in one book.... The Birds of Ecuador is an incredible achievement and is most highly recommended. * Wildlife Activist *This outstanding work is the culmination of a 20-year collaboration between Ridgely... and Greenfield.... Indispensable for those planning to do bird work in Ecuador or surrounding countries. Should be in every library with major holdings on bird life or tropical ecology. * Choice *The Birds of Ecuador is a monumental guide to the birds of this country and does a remarkable job of describing them all.... Volume 1 of The Birds of Ecuador could stand alone as a resource; however, it is completed (and made much more useful) by the accompanying volume 2 with its illustrations, descriptions, and range maps. The two volumes of this title will remain the stand for this country and for other South American bird guides for a long time. It is highly recommended for any research library. * E-Streams *Table of ContentsPlan of the BookBeginning With BirdsColor PlatesTinamiformesTinamidae - TinamousPodicipediformesPodicipedidae - GrebesSphenisciformesSpheniscidae - PenguinsProcellariilormesDiomedeidae - AlbatrossesProcellariidae - Shearwaters and PetrelsHydrobatidae - Storm-PetrelsPelecaniformesPhaethontidae - TropicbirdsFregatidae - FrigatebirdsSulidae - Boobies and GannetsPhalacrocoracidae - Cormorants and ShagsAnhingidae - DartersPelecanidae - PelicansAnseriformesAnhimidae - ScreamersAnatidae - Ducks, Geese, and SwansPhoenicopteriformesPhoenicopteridae - FlamingosCiconiilormesArdeidae - Herons, Bitterns, and EgretsThreskiornithidae - Ibises and SpoonbillsCiconiidae - StorksCathartidae - American VulturesFalconiformesAccipitridae - Kites, Eagles, Hawks, and OspreyFalconidae - Falcons and CaracarasGalliformesCracidae - Curassows, Guans, and ChachalacasOdontophoridae - New World QuailsGruiformesRallidae - Rails, Gallinules, and CootsEurypygidae - SunbitternHeliornithidae - FinfootsAramidae - LimpkinPsophiidae - TrumpetersCharadriiformesJacanidae - JacanasScolopacidae - Sandpipers, Snipes, and PhalaropesThinocoridae - SeedsnipesBurhinidae - Thick-kneesHaematopodidae - OystercatchersRecurvirostridae - Stilts and AvocetsCharadriidae - Plovers and LapwingsStercorariidae - Skuas and JaegersLaridae - Gulls and TernsRynchopidae - SkimmersColumbiformesColumbidae - Pigeons and DovesPsillaciformesPsittacidae - Parrots and MacawsCuculiformesCuculidae - Cuckoos and AnisOpisthocomidae - HoatzinSlrioiformesTytonidae - Barn OwlsStrigidae - Typical OwlsCaprimulgiformesSteatornithidae - OilbirdNyctibiidae - PotoosCaprimulgidae - Nightjars and NighthawksApodilormesApodidae - SwiftsTrochilidae - HummingbirdsTrogoniformesTrogonidae - Trogons and QuetzalsCoraciiformesAlcedinidae - KingfishersMomotidae - MotmotsPiciformesGalbiilidae - JacamarsBucconidae - PuffbirdsCapitonidae - New World BarbetsRamphastidae - ToucansPicidae - Woodpeckers and PiculetsPasserilormesFurnariidae - OvenbirdsDendrocolaptidae - WoodcreepersThamnophilidae - Typical AntbirdsFormicariidae - Antthrushes and AntpittasConopophagidae - GnateatersRhinocryptidae - TapaculosTyrannidae - Tyrant FlycatchersCotingidae - CotingasPipridae - ManakinsCorvidae - Crows, Jays, and MagpiesVireonidae - Vireos, Peppershrikes, and Shrike-VireosTurdidae - ThrushesMimidae - Mockingbirds and ThrashersCinclidae - DippersHirundinidae - Swallows and MartinsTroglodytidae - WrensPolioptilidae - Gnatcatchers and GnatwrensMotacillidae - Pipits and WagtailsParulidae - New World WarblersThraupidae - Tanagers, Honeycrccpers, Bananaquit, and PlushcapCardinalidac - Saltators, Grosbeaks, and CardinalsEmbcnzidae - Emherizine FinchesIcteridae - American Orioles and BlackbirdsFringillidae - Cardueline FinchesPasseridae - Old World SparrowsBibliographyIndex of English NamesIndex of Scientific Names
£34.46
University of Georgia Press Fishing for Chickens A Smokies Food Memoir
Book SynopsisA well-seasoned blend of memoir and cookbook, Fishing for Chickens offers the perspective of a Bryson City, North Carolina, native on a particular portion of southern Appalachia - the Smokies.
£32.26
MD - Duke University Press The Sri Lanka Reader History Culture Politics
Book SynopsisFifty-four images and more than ninety classic and contemporary texts introduce Sri Lankas recorded history of more than two and a half millennia.Trade Review“The Sri Lanka Reader is unprecedented. Never before has there been a book so synoptic in its treatment of Sri Lankan history, politics, and culture. The overall organization, the selections chosen for inclusion, and the introductions to the individual pieces are all of the highest order. This book will be welcomed by specialists in Sri Lankan studies, as well as the more general, educated reader.”—Roger R. Jackson, John W. Nason Professor of Asian Studies and Religion, Carleton College“John Holt’s The Sri Lanka Reader gives many insights into contemporary Sri Lanka while providing an in-depth picture of its rich history. Holt effectively weaves together documents, analytical accounts, photographs, and poetic works to produce a balanced work that is consistent in quality and readability despite accommodating many viewpoints. It is a book that you will return to time and again. It will undoubtedly become the standard collection of documents on Sri Lanka and its history.”—Chandra R. de Silva, author of Sri Lanka: A History“ [A] superb anthology edited by that most perceptive and shrewd observer of Sri Lanka and its complex social, economic and political history, John Clifford Holt. . . . John Holt’s Reader is a stellar collection of wide-ranging essays both scholarly and popular, folklore, poetry and reportage that run into a mammoth 700 plus pages. Nor is this all. The Reader contains 54 images of paintings, sculptures and architecture together with its editor’s suggestions for further reading and, a comprehensive index.” -- Tissa Jayatilaka * Sunday Times (Colombo) *“. . . the ideal source book for analytical study of Sri Lanka’s history enlightening the reader as to what caused the present ills.” -- Rajitha Weerakoon * Sunday Times (Colombo) *“The Sri Lanka Reader is an ambitious volume compiled with dexterity. Holt communicates with captivating force the island’s geopolitical, strategic and historical significance, offering the reader a nuanced introduction to the intrigue and diverse scholarship of this tiny island.” -- Nayana Bibile * Asian Studies Review *“The Sri Lanka Reader will make a valued gift to those Sri Lankans and others whose interest in the Island is intelligent and thoughtful; going deeper than beautiful tropical pictures (see the book’s cover); description of delicious dishes, and friendly inhabitants. It will be the standard ‘Reader’ on Sri Lanka for many years to come; a work not to be read once and put aside but to be kept, referred to, reflected upon, and used as a starting point for further reading according to one’s (different) interest.” -- Charles Ponnuthurai Sarvan * Sunday Leader (Columbo) *“[This is a must-have book for all Sri Lankan scholars.” -- Victor C. De Munck * Journal of World History *“The Sri Lanka Reader helps one in coming to terms with the country’s present, given that its past has, in a very large way, continually cast a shadow on the social and political trails it has followed. Reading the work makes for a clearer comprehension of Sri Lanka, warts and all.” -- Syed Badrul Ahsan * Asian Affairs *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations xiii Acknowledgments xv Introduction 1 I. From Ancient to Early Modern 9 II. The Colonial Encounter 133 Sri Lanka: National Identity and the Impact of Colonialism / K. M. da Silva 135 The Portuguese: An Introduction / Jorge Flores 152 The Dutch: An Introduction 189 The British: An Introduction 230 Kandyan Culture in the Colonial Era: An Introduction 295 Colonial Postscript: The Other Eden / Richard de Zoysa 328 III. Emerging Identities 331 Buddhist Identities: An Introduction 334 Muslim Identities: An Introduction 409 Tamil Identities: An Introduction 458 Christians and Burghers: An Introduction 559 Emergent Perspectives in Modern Art: the '43 Group—Formation of a Sri Lankan Avant-Garde / Larry D. Lutchmansingh 574 IV. Independence, Insurrections, and Social Change 589 V. Political Epilogue 713 Acknowledgment of Copyrights and Sources 735 Suggestions for Further Reading 745 Index 753
£25.19
Halsgrove The Jurassic Coast from the Sea
£15.29
Flatfish Books Hey Roberto Hu Travels in Venezuela and other
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£11.55
Karpovage Creative Charleston S.C Historic District Illustrated Map
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£999.99
Rainbow Publications UK Norfolk the County of my Birth
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£22.49
Mimi's Art THE 54 AND THEN SOME
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£26.09
Gone Beyond Guides A Complete Guide to the Grand Canyon A Complete
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£14.20
Legare Street Press Narrative of a Five Years Expedition Against the
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£28.76
CRC Press Advances in Scalable and Intelligent Geospatial
Book SynopsisGeospatial data acquisition and analysis techniques have experienced tremendous growth in the last few years, providing an opportunity to solve previously unsolved environmental- and natural resource-related problems. However, a variety of challenges are encountered in processing the highly voluminous geospatial data in a scalable and efficient manner. Technological advancements in high-performance computing, computer vision, and big data analytics are enabling the processing of big geospatial data in an efficient and timely manner. Many geospatial communities have already adopted these techniques in multidisciplinary geospatial applications around the world. This book is a single source that offers a comprehensive overview of the state of the art and future developments in this domain.FEATURES Demonstrates the recent advances in geospatial analytics tools, technologies, and algorithms Provides insight and direction to the geospatial community regarding the future trends in scalable and intelligent geospatial analytics Exhibits recent geospatial applications and demonstrates innovative ways to use big geospatial data to address various domain-specific, real-world problems Recognizes the analytical and computational challenges posed and opportunities provided by the increased volume, velocity, and veracity of geospatial data This book is beneficial to graduate and postgraduate students, academicians, research scholars, working professionals, industry experts, and government research agencies working in the geospatial domain, where GIS and remote sensing are used for a variety of purposes. Readers will gain insights into the emerging trends on scalable geospatial data analytics.
£999.99
Routledge Tourism Interventions
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£43.69
Routledge Place Marketing and Temporality
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£22.79
Blurb Petes Musings
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£41.32
Lulu.com Toxie Puff Boys Travel Guide to the Garden State
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£28.80
Arcadia Publishing (SC) Visit to the United States in 1841
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£15.67
The University of North Carolina Press North Carolinas Barrier Islands
Book SynopsisIn this stunning book, nature photographer and ecologist David Blevins offers an inspiring visual journey to North Carolina's barrier islands as you have never seen them before. These islands are unique and ever-changing places with epic origins, surprising plants and animals, and an uncertain future.
£37.35
Simon & Schuster Ltd Underneath the Christmas Tree
Book Synopsis***The sparkling new Christmas novel from the Sunday Times bestselling author Heidi Swain!*** Wynter’s Trees is the home of Christmas. For the people of Wynmouth it’s where they get their family Christmas tree, and where Christmas truly comes to life. But for Liza Wynter, it’s a millstone around her neck. It was her father’s pride and joy but now he’s gone, she can’t have anything to do with it. Until her father’s business partner decides to retire and she must go back to handle the transition to his son Ned. When Liza arrives, she discovers a much-loved business that’s flourishing under Ned’s stewardship. And she’s happy to stay and help for the Christmas season, but then she has other plans. But will the place where she grew up make her change her mind? And can it weave its Christmas cheer around her heart…?UnderneathTrade Review ‘Heidi Swain is the queen of feel-good fiction, and this Yuletide yarn certainly ticks all our boxes’ * New! Magazine *‘A seasonal romance as warm and welcome as a mug of mulled wine’ * Woman & Home *‘You’ll want to curl up with a hot choc to read this warm hug of a festive book’ * Fabulous Magazine *'The Magical One' * Heat, festive fiction picks *'This heartwarming story by Heidi Swain' * Hello *‘You can rely on Swain to deliver that festive magic and feel-good romance we so look forward to at the end of the year. Beautifully written, full of heartwarming and irresistibly Christmassy moments, this is blissful escapism with bells on' -- Isabelle Broom * Woman & Home Online *‘…this is a cosy story of redemption and romance’ * Daily Express, The twelve books of Christmas *‘If you’re looking for the perfect cosy festive read, then Heidi Swain’s new book will surely be for you…Promising snow, fires all aglow and a heart-warming romance, Underneath the Christmas Tree is another joyous read from the Sunday Times bestselling author' * Surrey Life Magazine *‘Brimming with emotion, drama, romance and friendship, and guaranteed to leave readers with a much-need sense of optimism, this simmering, snow-sprinkled tale – with its tantalising air of magic and cosy blanket of love and laughter – is the ideal warm-up for the Christmas season' * Lancashire Evening Post *
£8.54
Rowman & Littlefield Shea Stadium Remembered
Book SynopsisFew remember that Shea Stadiumand indeed the Mets baseball club itselfarose out of a dispute between two oversized egos: New York City official Robert Moses and Brooklyn Dodgers owner Walter O'Malley. While O'Malley wanted complete control over a new stadium and all of its concessions in Brooklyn, Moses insisted that the stadium be built by the city in Queens and leased to the Dodgers. The impasse led to the Dodgers following the Giants out to the West Coast, where The City of Los Angeles granted O'Malley all of the concessions he had sought in New York. With now no National League team in the New York area, the National League office awarded a new franchise to the city in 1960 on conditional that it fund and build a new stadium, which the Mets (and later the AFL Jets) would lease. The stadium was named in honor of William Shea, the person most responsible for returning National League baseball to New York.Over its forty-four year existence Shea Stadium witnessed a colorful
£16.14
Rowman & Littlefield Hiking Waterfalls New England
Book SynopsisFully revised and updated, Hiking Waterfalls New England includes detailed hike descriptions, maps, and color photos for approximately 100 of the most scenic waterfall hikes in the region. Hike descriptions also include history, local trivia, and GPS coordinates. Hiking Waterfalls New England will take you through state and national parks, forests, monuments and wilderness areas, and from popular city parks to the most remote and secluded corners of the area to view the most spectacular waterfalls.
£14.99
IMM Lifestyle Books Walking London's Waterways, Updated Edition:
Book SynopsisLondon is strewn with waterways, but the River Thames twisting through the capital can be seen from a radically different perspective in the futuristic Docklands area to the more sleepy suburbs of Putney, Chiswick and Barnes.Much of Camden's quaint charm would be lost without the Regent's Canal, and further out in the suburbs the Wandle, Lea and Brent rivers are well worth discovering.Walking London's Waterways is an exploration, in 21 carefully researched walks, of London's varied waterways in all their glory. Gilly Cameron-Cooper's engaging text is steeped in historical detail, and is accompanied by clear and detailed route maps and enchanting photographs.
£9.49
Workman Publishing Alaska Free Wall Calendar 2025
Book SynopsisA year of Alaska’s natural majesty, captured by world-class photographers following the Nature First principles of responsible photography. PRISTINE BEAUTY: Enjoy twelve iconic Alaskan wilderness landscapes, including Denali National Park, Ester Dome, Castner Ice Caves, the Alaska Range, and more. WONDER AND AWE: Inspiring photography by Photo Cascadia captures Alaska at its most breathtaking—you’ll feel like you’re there, no matter where you are. GREAT GIFT: Perfect for wilderness lovers, nature appreciators, and especially those who wish they could spend all year in America’s wildest state. NOW PLASTIC-FREE!: All Workman wall calendars are now printed with an extended paper flap closed with a fully recyclable seal—no more shrink-wrap!
£12.59
FriesenPress Call Me Steve: Lessons From A Samburu Warrior
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£22.32
Gale and the British Library Bradshaw's Illustrated Guide Through Paris and
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£14.34
Milkweed Editions Graceland, At Last: Notes on Hope and Heartache
Book SynopsisWinner of the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the EssayWinner of the 2022 Southern Book PrizeAn Indie Next Selection for September 2021A Book Marks Best Reviewed Essay Collection of 2021A Literary Hub Most Anticipated Book of 2021A Country Living Best Book of Fall 2021A Garden & Gun Recommended Read for Fall 2021A Book Marks Best Reviewed Book of September 2021For the past four years, Margaret Renkl’s columns have offered readers of The New York Times a weekly dose of natural beauty, human decency, and persistent hope from her home in Nashville. Now more than sixty of those pieces have been brought together in this sparkling new collection.“People have often asked me how it feels to be the ‘voice of the South,’” writes Renkl in her introduction. “But I’m not the voice of the South, and no one else is, either.” There are many Souths—red and blue, rural and urban, mountain and coast, Black and white and brown—and no one writer could possibly represent all of them. In Graceland, At Last, Renkl writes instead from her own experience about the complexities of her homeland, demonstrating along the way how much more there is to this tangled region than many people understand.In a patchwork quilt of personal and reported essays, Renkl also highlights some other voices of the South, people who are fighting for a better future for the region. A group of teenagers who organized a youth march for Black Lives Matter. An urban shepherd whose sheep remove invasive vegetation. Church parishioners sheltering the homeless. Throughout, readers will find the generosity of spirit and deep attention to the world, human and nonhuman, that keep readers returning to her columns each Monday morning.From a writer who “makes one of all the world’s beings” (NPR), Graceland, At Last is a book full of gifts for Southerners and non-Southerners alike.Trade ReviewPraise for Graceland, At Last“Margaret Renkl’s weekly essays for the New York Times offer a model for how to move through our world with insight and sensitivity. Graceland, At Last takes in the full scope of her surroundings, and the reader walks away wanting to see as she sees, hear what she hears, smell what she smells. It’s a stellar collection that spans nature writing and cultural criticism, the present and the past, full of explorations of religion, belief, and Southern politics that flex a cordial, probing curiosity. She picks good heroes—John Lewis, John Prine, ‘the lowly Tennessee coneflower’—and she makes sharp judgments without sounding judgmental. At a moment of extreme division, Renkl writes with a generosity of spirit, as a neighbor rather than ideologue.”—PEN America Judges’ Citation, Winner of the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay“[Graceland, At Last] is Renkl at her most tender and most fierce. . . . Renkl’s gift, just as it was in her first book Late Migrations, is to make fascinating for others what is closest to her heart. . . . What rises in me after reading her essays is [John] Lewis’ famous urging to get in good trouble to make the world fairer and better. Many people in the South are doing just that—and through her beautiful writing, Renkl is among them.”—NPR“In this luminous collection, Renkl delivers smart, beautifully crafted personal and political observations. . . . I keep this book nearby to revisit the humanity and hope in its pages.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune“Renkl’s perspective feels like a guiding light. . . . No matter where you’re from, column after column, Margaret Renkl will make you feel right at home.”—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette“Amazing and inspiring. [Graceland, At Last] will help you figure out concrete things you can do to save the planet.”—Ann Patchett, author of The Dutch House“Graceland, At Last gathers a selection of Renkl’s columns from the past four years, inviting loyal readers and newcomers alike to take in Renkl’s perspective on the world. . . . Whether extolling the wonders of a rattlesnake or lamenting Southern Christians’ support of oppressive policies, Renkl engages with her home region’s beauty and complexity.”—BookPage“Everyone should have a friend like Margaret Renkl: thoughtful, engaged, compassionate and, above all, acutely observant. Since that’s not always possible, the next best thing is to share her company in the diverse and consistently stimulating essay collection Graceland, At Last. . . . Renkl is both unfailingly honest and deeply empathetic in creating the vivid portrait of her home region that emerges organically from these intensely personal and well-informed essays.”—Shelf Awareness“Reading the short essays in this book has strengthened my understanding and love for the South, its people, its land, and its complexities. I especially have enjoyed reading Renkl’s thoughtful reflections on flora and fauna, and I find myself looking to my changing backyard this fall with a new appreciation.”—Garden & Gun, “New Reads for Fall 2021”“[Renkl] doesn’t shy from hard topics but explores them with the careful hand of someone whose heart yearns for healing, growth, and understanding for the region she loves. A must read for those who live and love the South!”—Country Living, “Best Books of Fall 2021”“As the essays collected in Graceland, At Last prove, she’s challenged her readers to rise and confront many of the complex issues facing our Southern communities. . . . Renkl, an Alabama native and lifelong Southerner living in Nashville, does so with such deep respect and understanding, and such powerful, insightful, Southern-accented prose, that even her polemics come off as love letters. . . . We catch glimpses of ourselves in her wise and poignant reflections, and I for one am grateful and grinning.”—Charleston Post and Courier“In her newest book, Graceland, At Last, Renkl invites readers—southerners and non-southerners alike—into her homeland, her city, her yard. . . . What we discover along the way is a place that is both ‘damaged and damaging,’ but also full of people who inspire and landscapes too beautiful for words. Through these warm and heartfelt essays, Renkl shows us how to keep on loving this complicated place, how to look right at its ‘appalling truths’ and gesture, still, toward hope.”—Southern Humanities Review“While [Graceland, At Last] is not a how-to, we come away with how to better ‘belong to one another’ in a time when we desperately need to.”—Arkansas International“From her home in Nashville—‘a blue dot in the red sea of Tennessee’—[Renkl] writes perceptively of the region where she was born and raised (in Alabama), educated (in South Carolina), and settled. . . . Renkl vividly evokes the lush natural beauty of the rivers, old-growth forests, ‘red-dirt pineywoods,’ marshes, and coastal plains that she deeply loves. . . . A wide-ranging look at the realities of the South.”—Kirkus Reviews“If you’ve happened upon the poignant and off-road opinion pieces Renkl writes as a contributor to The New York Times, you already know that the natural world is something she closely observes and uses as a springboard to contemplate other, less tangible subjects. . . . Her life story and her life’s passion intertwine, like a fence post and a trumpet vine.”—Maureen Corrigan, NPR’s Fresh Air“Graceland, At Last takes us to Renkl’s homeland and shines a light on life in the South, its complexities and its hopes. In these pages, you will find Black Lives Matter organizers, churches sheltering the homeless, and even helpful sheep. Reading Margaret Renkl is like seeing the world in color for the first time.”—Literary Hub, “Most Anticipated Books of 2021”“New York Times columnist Renkl effectively lifts the lid on Southern culture and challenges its stereotypes in this versatile compendium. Renkl’s essays cover the natural world, local politics, Southern-fried art and culture, and social justice issues from a Nashvillian perspective. Her nature writing shows an impressive predilection for botany and ornithology. . . . [Graceland, At Last] serves as a well-written collection for anyone interested in everyday life below the Mason-Dixon Line.”—Publishers Weekly“Like nothing else in the newspaper, [Renkl’s columns] burst with awareness of the things of nature, awareness that our lives are led in that midst, permeated with and part of the natural world. All is written with an open, joyful, yet steady voice of wonder.”—Philadelphia Inquirer“In 1956, author E.B. White suggested that newspapers cover nature as eagerly as commerce, having columns devoted not only to the flow of business but also the arrival of birds. Renkl . . . seems like a belated answer to White . . . [crafting] graceful sentences that White would surely have enjoyed. A collection of her Times columns would be a welcome thing.”—Wall Street Journal“Renkl is a master prose stylist, her generation’s E.B. White. Whatever she writes about comes alive through carefully crafted sentences in which sound and sense harmonize at the highest levels.”—California Review of Books “Renkl is so likable, as a writer and an individual, with her rich family traditions, her concern for justice, and her observant and unsentimental love of nature, that every paragraph feels like a conversation with a friend.”—Brevity“It’s heartening to see a columnist for a major American newspaper writing regularly about nature with a passion the media’s chattering classes typically reserve only for politics and entertainment. . . . Renkl’s columns deserve to be read again, and for years to come.”—Christian Science Monitor“Renkl’s essays alternate between balm for the soul and outrage at the world with all of its injustices. She makes me think and see things in a different light and for that I’m eternally grateful.”—Indie Next List (September 2021), selected by Jayne Gowsam, Mystery to Me“Readers can easily home in on one of the book’s wide-ranging six sections, sample an essay or two from each, or barrel through from start to finish, as whim dictates. Renkl’s voice is calm, steady, and sometimes surprising. . . . She celebrates a host of new voices in southern writing and sees in their work the light of justice and hope for the South.”—Booklist“Renkl is one of my absolute favorite writers working today. Like Late Migrations before it, Graceland, At Last is a gift—full of sorrow, joy, grief, and yes—hope. I implore you to read her work.”—Alex Brubaker, Midtown Scholar Bookstore“Renkl is my favorite essayist. Every week I look for her column in the opinion pages of the New York Times. In a time when the country has such deep divisions, I can rely on her writing to be all heart, no snark. I’m so proud to have this fellow Nashvillian’s newest collection on my shelf.”—Karen Hayes, Parnassus Books“Renkl wrote a favorite book of mine, Late Migrations, which was published in 2019. In this collection of essays, she expands upon what being a Southerner means to her, and not surprisingly I loved it. She writes about nature, her Christian faith, politics, systemic racism, musicians, and a variety of cultural influencers that are a rich variety of her reflections being raised in Alabama and as an adult living in Nashville. Through it all she searches with compassion and empathy for common ground so that all people can aspire to and live a better life.”—Todd Miller, Arcadia Books“The only thing better than a Margaret Renkl column appearing in my paper in the morning is a book of columns that appears all at once! Margaret’s grace of language, heart-filled societal goals and appreciation for the natural world fill this collection and give readers ideas, poignant facts to think about, and hope.”—Kira Wizner, Merritt Bookstore“It’s one thing to be a good reporter. Another to be a good writer. And finally, and more rare, a good storyteller. Renkl is among our best at all three. To see her full powers on display in this collection is truly a gift. We are in a golden age of nonfiction, I feel, and Renkl is one of the brightest reasons why. I love this book.”—Chris La Tray, Fact & Fiction“With the same profound observation and sensitivity as in her first book, Renkl’s collection of newspaper columns in Graceland, At Last explores even more aspects of the current American South, going beyond stereotypes and caricatures to reveal the real people, plants, and animals that live there, and how they band together during the dark times of the last few years. From social justice to family recipes, these short columns illuminate all manner of hidden things that often go overlooked.”—Ellie Ray, Content Book Store“It’s a punch in the gut and a balm for the soul. Graceland, At Last is Renkl’s collection of essays from the New York Times, and she has assembled a wide range of columns considering everything from birds to country music to social justice. Renkl is a writer who throws her whole self into her observations. . . . Her observations on the American experience are hard to take sometimes. She pulls no punches about American failures in race relations, care of the environment, and political life. Yet, she is also a writer full of the wonder about the world, seeing and helping us to see the hope and possibility in humanity.”—Sarah Young, Raven Book Store“Since 2017, Mondays have been redeemed by the appearance of a new column by Renkl in the Opinion section of the New York Times. By turns humorous, angry, hopeful, or meditative—and always graceful, thought-provoking, and deftly observed—these views of life from Nashville show us our world in ways we may not have thought of it before. Now Renkl has gathered 59 of these bite-sized pieces into a substantial collection. Organized ‘as a kind of patchwork quilt’—in homage to her foremothers—Graceland, At Last challenges the notion of a homogenous New South even as it gives a balanced view of the region through its distinctive natural landscape, political and cultural history, and the specifics of Renkl’s own life and family. What emerges is a wide-ranging portrait of a place as rich in beauty and tradition as it is blighted by racism and bias. Renkl decries the worst of the South’s Red State tendencies while celebrating its effort to face and transcend them with new institutions such as the Legacy Museum and the National Memorial for Peace and Justice. She laments the thoughtless cutting down of trees but finds hope in the sight of purple martins—a bird whose survival depends on human-supplied birdhouses. Other gems include the reminder that a rattlesnake is a gentle, not a malign creature, and her donning of five inherited wedding bands as an amulet against her fears—one that works like a charm.”—Laurie Greer, Politics & Prose“Late Migrations is a staff favorite at our store. Not only do we hand sell it to customers, we have been giving copies as gifts far and wide. The author’s writing is spare, beautiful, thoughtful and wise, and she captures a Southern life in a way no one else does. For those who relish Renkl’s writing in the New York Times, Graceland, At Last provides a wonderful opportunity to reread favorite essays, as well as share her writing with others.”—Lia Lent, Wordsworth Books“Renkl’s weekly New York Times columns about culture in the South call out our many failures while describing in beautiful details what makes our part of America so beautiful. Just when I think there’s no possible way to capture the tension between the terrible and the special, Renkl’s words are there to express what I am feeling.”—Sissy Gardner, Parnassus Books“Renkl is terrific. I loved dipping in and out of these essays.”—Sheryl Cotleur, Copperfield’s BooksPraise for Late MigrationsA TODAY Show #ReadWithJenna Book Club PickWinner of 2020 Phillip D. Reed Environmental Writing AwardFinalist for the Southern Book PrizeNamed a “Best Book of the Year” by New Statesman, New York Public Library, Chicago Public Library, Foreword Reviews, and Washington Independent Review of BooksAn Indie Next Selection, Indies Introduce Selection, and Okra Pick“Beautifully written, masterfully structured, and brimming with insight into the natural world, Late Migrations can claim its place alongside Pilgrim at Tinker Creek and A Death in the Family. It has the makings of an American classic.”—Ann Patchett“[Margaret Renkl] is the most beautiful writer! I love this book. It’s about the South, and growing up there, and about her love of nature and animals and her wonderful family.”—Reese Witherspoon“Reflective and gorgeous . . . I have recommended this book to everybody that I know. It is a beautiful book about love, and [how] . . . to find the beauty in the little things.”—Jenna Bush Hager, the TODAY Show“A perfect book to read in the summer . . . This is the kind of writing that makes me just want to stay put, reread and savor everything about that moment.”—Maureen Corrigan, NPR’s Fresh Air“Equal parts Annie Dillard and Anne Lamott with a healthy sprinkle of Tennessee dry rub thrown in.”—New York Times Book Review“A compact glory, crosscutting between consummate family memoir and keenly observed backyard natural history. Margaret Renkl’s deft juxtapositions close up the gap between humans and nonhumans and revive our lost kinship with other living things.”—Richard Powers, author of The Overstory“Magnificent . . . Conjure your favorite place in the natural world: beach, mountain, lake, forest, porch, windowsill rooftop? Precisely there is the best place in which to savor this book.”—NPR.org“Late Migrations has echoes of Annie Dillard’s The Writing Life—with grandparents, sons, dogs and birds sharing the spotlight, it’s a witty, warm and unaccountably soothing all-American story.”—People“[Renkl] guides us through a South lush with bluebirds, pecan orchards, and glasses of whiskey shared at dusk in this collection of prose in poetry-size bits; as it celebrates bounty, it also mourns the profound losses we face every day.” —O, the Oprah Magazine“A lovely collection of essays about life, nature, and family. It will make you laugh, cry—and breathe more deeply.”—Parade“This warm, rich memoir might be the sleeper of the summer. [Renkl] grew up in the South, nursed her aging parents, and never once lost her love for life, light, and the natural world. Beautiful is the word, beautiful all the way through.” —Philadelphia Inquirer“Like the spirituality of Krista Tippett’s On Being meets the brevity of Joe Brainard . . . The miniature essays in Late Migrations approach with modesty, deliver bittersweet epiphanies, and feel like small doses of religion.”—Literary Hub“In her poignant debut, a memoir, Renkl weaves together observations from her current home in Nashville and short vignettes of nature and growing up in the South.”—Garden & Gun“A book that will be treasured.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune“One of the best books I’ve read in a long time . . . [and] one of the most beautiful essay collections that I have ever read. It will give you chills.”—Silas House, author of Southernmost“Renkl holds my attention with essays about plants and caterpillars in a way no other nature writer can.”—Mary Laura Philpott, author of I Miss You When I Blink“This is the story of grief accelerated by beauty and beauty made richer by grief . . . Like Patti Smith in Woolgathering, Renkl aligns natural history with personal history so completely that the one becomes the other. Like Annie Dillard in Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Renkl makes, of a ring of suburbia, an alchemical exotica.”—The Rumpus“Renkl feels the lives and struggles of each creature that enters her yard as keenly as she feels the paths followed by her mother, grandmother, her people. Learning to accept the sometimes harsh, always lush natural world may crack open a window to acceptance of our own losses. In Late Migrations, we welcome new life, mourn its passing, and honor it along the way.”—Indie Next List (July 2019), Selected by Kat Baird, The Book Bin“[A] stunning collection of essays merging the natural landscapes of Alabama and Tennessee with generations of family history, grief and renewal. Renkl’s voice sounds very close to the reader’s ear: intimate, confiding, candid and alert.”—Shelf Awareness (starred review)“Late Migrations is a gift, and fortunate readers will steal away to a beloved nook or oasis to commune with its riches. Or they will simply dig into it, unprepared, like the mother with no gardening tools who determinedly pulls weeds until the ground blossoms. They might entrust it to fellow seekers they believe can handle its power. Consecrated, they’ll leave initiated into an art of observation lived beautifully in richness, connection, worry, and love.”—The Christian Century“How can any brief description capture this entirely original and deeply satisfying book? . . . I can’t help but compile a list of people I want to gift with Late Migrations. I want them to emerge from it, as I did, ready to apprehend the world freshly, better able to perceive its connections and absorb its lessons.”—Beth Ann Fennelly, Chapter 16“[A] magnificent debut . . . Renkl instructs that even amid life’s most devastating moments, there are reasons for hope and celebration. Readers will savor each page and the many gems of wisdom they contain.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)“Contemplative yet powerful . . . Renkl is so in touch with the birds and butterflies of her yard that one could mistake her for a trained naturalist.”—Book Page (starred review)“Compelling, rich, satisfying . . . The short, potent essays of Renkl’s Late Migrations are objects as worthy of marvel and study as the birds and other creatures they observe.”—Foreword Reviews (starred review)“Renkl captures the spirit and contemporary culture of the American South better than anyone.”—Book Page, A 2019 Most Anticipated Nonfiction Book“[Late Migrations] is shot through with deep wonder and a profound sense of loss. It is a fine feat, this book. Renkl intimately knows that ‘this life thrives on death’ and chooses to sing the glory of being alive all the same.”—Booklist“A series of redolent snapshots and memories that seem to halt time . . . [Renkl’s] narrative metaphor becomes the miraculous order of nature . . . in all its glory and cruelty; she vividly captures ‘the splendor of decay.’”—Kirkus“A captivating, beautifully written story of growing up, love, loss, living, and a close extended family by a talented nature writer and memoirist that will appeal to those who enjoy introspective memoirs and the natural world close to home.”—Library Journal“A beautifully written collection of essays about nature and the author's childhood.”—NYPL.org (Best Book of 2019)“Compact, delicate like a work of poetry, and often gorgeous in detail, this is a refreshing read for readers interested in family as well as nature.”—Chicago Public Library“Late Migrations is such a beautiful book, you’ll want to gift it to someone you love. Meditative and poetic, without being stuffy, Renkl gets at the meanings in life.”—Campus Circle“A close and vigilant witness to loss and gain, Renkl wrenches meaning from the intimate moments that define us. Her work is a chronicle of being. And a challenge to cynicism. Late Migrations is flat-out brilliant and it has arrived right on time.”—John T. Edge, author of The Potlikker Papers“Gracefully written and closely observed, Renkl’s lovely essays are tinged with the longing for family and places now gone while rejoicing in the flutter of birds and life still alive.”—Alan Lightman, author of Einstein’s Dreams“Here is an extraordinary mind combined with a poet’s soul to register our own old world in a way we have not quite seen before. Late Migrations is the psychological and spiritual portrait of an entire family and place presented in quick takes—snapshots—a soul’s true memoir. The dire dreams and fears of childhood, the mother’s mysterious tears, the imperfect beloved family . . . all are part of a charged and vibrant natural world also filled with rivalry, conflict, the occasional resolution, loss, and delight. Late Migrations is a continual revelation.”—Lee Smith, author of The Last Girls“What a treasure. I was captivated by the astonishing vignettes she created in just a few short sentences; mere fragments conveyed a lifetime.”—Jenny Lyons, Vermont Bookshop (Literary Hub)“In compact, lyrical essays, Renkl captures the fleeting brutal beauty of life. Renkl’s keen observations of suburban nature—birds, butterflies, and brambles—give depth and texture to the narratives she shares about her parents, her daily life, and her child’s clear-eyed curiosity. Like Helen Macdonald’s H is for Hawk, Renkl’s Late Migrations reads as a grief memoir bound up with deeply attentive nature writing.”—Trista Doyle, Left Bank Books“Late Migrations is a gorgeous, somber treasure of a book. Death and its many forms permeate Renkl’s meditative work; from the death of her father to the death of a small bird in the road, grief is a constant companion throughout these pages. But the sorrow never becomes overwhelming; in fact, each passage takes on a unique, bittersweet wisdom that can only be gained by experiencing loss. Renkl’s part memoir, part nature writing, and part essay collection is such a unique reading experience and one I will remember and recommend for many years to come.”—Caleb Masters, BookmarksTable of ContentsIntroductionFlora & FaunaHawk. Lizard. Mole. Human.The Flower That Came Back from the DeadThe Eagles of Reelfoot LakeThe Real Aliens in Our BackyardMake America Graze AgainThe Misunderstood, Maligned RattlesnakeMaking Way for MonarchsThe Call of the American LotusPolitics & ReligionA Monument the Old South Would Like to IgnoreThe Final Battleground in the Fight for SuffrageThe Hits Keep Coming for the Red-State PoorA Slow-Motion Coup in TennesseeWe’re All Addicts HereThere Is a Middle Ground on GunsAn American TragedyThe Passion of Southern ChristiansChristians Need a New Right-to-Life MovementShame and Salvation in the American SouthGoing to Church with Jimmy CarterSocial JusticeWhat Is America to Me?ICE Came to Take Their Neighbor. They Said No.Christmas Isn’t Coming to Death RowAn Act of Mercy in TennesseeAn Open Letter to My Fellow White ChristiansLooking Our Racist History in the EyeMiddle Passage to Mass IncarcerationIn Memphis, Journalism Can Still Bring JusticeAn Open Letter to John LewisReading the New SouthThese Kids Are Done Waiting for ChangeEnvironmentAmerica’s Killer LawnsDangerous WatersMore Trees, Happier PeopleI Have a Cure for the Dog Days of SummerThe Case against Doing NothingThe Fox in the StrollerDeath of a CatA 150,000-Bird Orchestra in the SkyFamily & CommunityWaking Up to HistoryWhy I Wear Five Wedding RingsDemolition BluesThe Gift of Shared GriefRemembrance of Recipes PastAll the Empty Seats at the TableWhat It Means to Be #NashvilleStrongThe Night the Lights Went OutThe Story of the Surly Santa and the Christmas MiracleTrue Love in the Age of CoronavirusArts & CultureKeep America’s Roadside WeirdCountry Music as Melting PotJohn Prine: American OracleSo Long to Music City’s Favorite Soap Opera“Beauty Herself Is Black”The Day the Music DiedAfter War, Three Chords and the TruthProud Graduate of State U.What Is a Southern Writer, Anyway?Graceland, At LastAcknowledgments
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