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A Picture of Britain (Unabridged)
 
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A Picture of Britain (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by David Dimbleby (Author, Narrator), David Blaney Brown (Author, Narrator), Richard Humphreys (Author, Narrator), Christine Riding (Narrator)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
List Price: £24.31
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 5 hours and 12 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Orion Publishing Group Limited
  • Audible Release Date: 28 Dec 2006
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQ7KDE
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Accompanying a major BBC1 series presented by David Dimbleby, and an exhibition at Tate Britain, A Picture of Britain is a celebration of the British landscape and the art it has inspired, from Constable to Lowry, from Turner to Nash. From the slopes of Snowdonia to the industrial Black Country, from the grandeur of the Scottish Highlands to the meadows of Suffolk, the British landscape has inspired artists and writers for generations. This remarkable audiobook, read by all four contributors, captures our rich cultural heritage, creating for the listener "a picture of Britain".
©2005 David Dimbleby; © and (P)2006 Orion Publishing Group Ltd.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
28 of 28 people found the following review helpful
By Budge Burgess TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
The BBC has established a considerable reputation for its ability to make dramatic, themed documentaries, using the landscape, travel, culture, ideas or history as its canvas, and painting vivid pictures which combine scholarly authority with excellent television and a package of DVD's, books, etc. David Dimbleby's excursions into the artistic inspiration of the British landscape seem to combine all aspects of the formula.

Dimbleby, of course, has great gravitas as a television presenter, and he makes a first class job of dragging the landscape and its changing weather patterns into your living room and consciousness. It was a thoroughly engaging television series - as a Scot, as a Celt, I have to say that Dimbleby can be a bit too English at times, but, overall, he does a compelling job of relating the natural canvas to the artistic one.

So how does the television series translate to book form? Well, not at all badly. The narrative is thoroughly accessible, well paced, and highly informative. The illustrations and print quality are first rate. All in all, it is a book which you may well treasure and which will, hopefully, provide inspiration to get you out to look at your surrounding landscape, to pick up pastel or brush, pen and paper, camera or clay, and find that emotional connection with place and environment which enriches us all.

However, while I can be disparaging of 'coffee table' books which simply offer loads of glossy photographs with little substance, "A Picture of Britain" loses something in its lack of pictures! Oh, it is beautifully illustrated, beautifully packaged, but much of the fascination of the television series lay in the ability of the camera to move you around, to get in close or pull back, to capture the essence of changing light and atmosphere. A book simply can't do that.

As an accompaniment to the series, this is a very fine book. As a stand alone, it is more of an hors d'oeuvres than a main course. But, whether you buy the one or both, the message really is, get out there, open your eyes, enjoy the extraordinary range of landscapes in the British Isles, appreciate the fickle British weather - sun, storm, night, day, land or sea - and be aware of the extraordinary quality of light which we experience on these islands, light of such subtlety and quality no scene is ever the same minute by minute, never mind day by day.

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42 of 46 people found the following review helpful
By Budge Burgess TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
The BBC has established a considerable reputation for its ability to make dramatic, themed documentaries, using the landscape, travel, culture, ideas or history as its canvas, and painting vivid pictures which combine scholarly authority with excellent television and a package of DVD's, books, etc. David Dimbleby's excursions into the artistic inspiration of the British landscape seem to combine all aspects of the formula.

Dimbleby, of course, has great gravitas as a television presenter, and he makes a first class job of dragging the landscape and its changing weather patterns into your living room and consciousness. It was a thoroughly engaging television series - as a Scot, as a Celt, I have to say that Dimbleby can be a bit too English at times, but, overall, he does a compelling job of relating the natural canvas to the artistic one.

So how does the television series translate to book form? Well, not at all badly. The narrative is thoroughly accessible, well paced, and highly informative. The illustrations and print quality are first rate. All in all, it is a book which you may well treasure and which will, hopefully, provide inspiration to get you out to look at your surrounding landscape, to pick up pastel or brush, pen and paper, camera or clay, and find that emotional connection with place and environment which enriches us all.

However, while I can be disparaging of 'coffee table' books which simply offer loads of glossy photographs with little substance, "A Picture of Britain" loses something in its lack of pictures! Oh, it is beautifully illustrated, beautifully packaged, but much of the fascination of the television series lay in the ability of the camera to move you around, to get in close or pull back, to capture the essence of changing light and atmosphere. A book simply can't do that.

As an accompaniment to the series, this is a very fine book. As a stand alone, it is more of an hors d'oeuvres than a main course. But, whether you buy the one or both, the message really is, get out there, open your eyes, enjoy the extraordinary range of landscapes in the British Isles, appreciate the fickle British weather - sun, storm, night, day, land or sea - and be aware of the extraordinary quality of light which we experience on these islands, light of such subtlety and quality no scene is ever the same minute by minute, never mind day by day.

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Was this review helpful to you?
60 of 68 people found the following review helpful
By Mr. GF Settle VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
As soon as I had finished watching the first episode of the series I knew that I had to go and look for the book that accompanies it and then get to the Tate Gallery when the exhibition takes place.

As soon as I placed the book in my hand I knew that I was going to buy it. The writing is informative and will allow everyone to enjoy not only the art through the pictures and words but the associated photographs of the landscape.

I haven't seen it advertised yet but I'm sure that there will be a CD of the music coming soon to complete the package.

The series like the book gives you those little extras all the time and weaves the arts of painting, music, literature together as well as the romance, fear and life of the artists. It takes you on a journey not only visually but in a sense physically and emotionally.

You want to go to the places and I bet when you do you will take this book and trace the footsteps of the artist but watch out.

Don't do as Gough did on fall off striding edge going up or down Helvellyn. I remember the time that I was up their on the top and looked back to where my footsteps had been right across a snow edge with Gough's fatal drop to the Red Tarn below. I was lucky he was not so take care and don't read the book while you are walking as you may get drawn in too far.

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