“How to describe the ecstatic song of larks? How the writers and poets have tried…”
Skylarks are the heralds of our countryside. Their music is the quintessential sound of spring. The spirit of English pastoralism, they inspire poets, composers and farmers alike. In the trenches of World War I they were a reminder of the chattering meadows of home.
Perhaps you were up with the lark, or as happy as one. History has seen us poeticise and musicise the bird, but also capture and eat them. We watch as they climb the sky, delight in their joyful singing, and yet we harm them too.
The Soaring life of the Lark explores the music and poetry; the breath-taking heights and struggle to survive of one of Britain’s most iconic songbirds.
PRAISE FOR JOHN LEWIS-STEMPEL
‘Britain’s finest living nature writer’ – The Times
‘Lewis-Stempel is a fourth-generation farmer gifted with an extraordinary ability to write prose that soars and sings’ – Daily Mail

The Hiding Place
What Writers Read
The Taming of the Shrew
Rewilding the Sea : How to Save our Oceans
Take Me Home Tonight
Shadow and Bone
The Pigeon Tunnel
Maths On the Back of An Envelope
Winter Skills
The Girl Who Came Out of the Woods
Victoire
The Tao of Bowie : 10 Lessons from David Bowie's Life to Help You Live Yours
The Merchant of Venice
Poems For Happiness
Happy Moments
Welsh Retrospective
One small voice
SIGNED Look Up, Handsome by Jack Strange
Our Woodland Birds
Julius Caesar
The Waste Land : A Biography of a Poem
Two for Joy
Gift Wrapping
RSPB British Naturefinder


