The Lake District is one of our busiest national parks. Many people believe that wildness is long gone from the fells, lakes, tarns and becks, yet, within its boundaries, Jim Crumley sets out to prove them wrong – to find “a new way of seeing and writing about this most seen and written about of landscapes”.
With a naturalist’s eye and a poet’s instinct he is drawn to Lakeland’s turned-aside places where nature still thrives, from low-lying shores to a high mountain oakwood that’s not even on the map. Through backwaters and backwoods, Crumley traces this captivating land’s place in the evolution of global conservation and pleads the case for a far-reaching reappraisal of all of Lakeland’s wildness.

The Sunday Times Teasers Book 1
Hereford & Ross-On-Wye
The Penguin Book Quiz
Escape Room
Asterix in Belgium
Great British Spirit
Still Life
The Ordnance Survey Puzzle Book
The life inside
Heroic Animals
Concise Garden Bird Guide
Our Woodland Birds


