One summer, Simon Armitage decided to walk the Pennine Way – a challenging 256-mile route usually approached from south to north, with the sun, wind and rain at your back. However, he resolved to tackle it back to front, walking home towards the Yorkshire village where he was born, travelling as a ‘modern troubadour’, without a penny in his pockets and singing for his supper with poetry readings in village halls, churches, pubs and living rooms.
Walking Home describes his extraordinary, yet ordinary, journey of human endeavour, unexpected kindnesses and terrible blisters.
The companion volume, Walking Away, is published in June 2015.

The Nameless Ones
Great Britain
Rules for Perfect Murders : The 'fiendishly good' Richard and Judy Book Club pick
Around the Coast in 80 Days
The Heron's Cry
Erebus
Bookshop Tours of Britain
A State of Fear
Gift Wrapping
England
Tall Bones
Welcome To the Circular Economy
Vile Stars


