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The Wild Places (Penguin Original)
 
 
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The Wild Places (Penguin Original) [Paperback]

Robert MacFarlane
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (41 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 340 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Books (24 Jun 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0143113933
  • ISBN-13: 978-0143113935
  • Product Dimensions: 19 x 14.1 x 1.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (41 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 727,342 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Robert Macfarlane
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Product Description

The Scotsman

"This beautiful book takes us to tree tops, beaches and mountains... in the company of a supremely lyrical writer" --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

The Evening Standard

"...this is beautiful as well as intelligent writing...a new naturalist to set beside the classics in our literature" --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
160 of 169 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Is it a coincidence that Roger Deakin and Robert Macfarlane were both writing a book with "wild" in the title at roughly the same time? Deakin, a friend of Macfarlane's, died shortly after completing "Wildwood", Macfarlane was completing his manuscript when Deakin died.

"Wild" is big book business at the moment and why not? 21st century European life seems to guarantee a divorce between self and environment and people turn to books, if not their walking boots, to fill the gap. Macfarlane visits the wild places of the British Isles and tries to capture their essence in prose for those of us who don't want to stir from our sofas (that includes me by the way). It is an admirable endeavour and an enjoyable read, but I reserve the fourth star for the following reasons:

It is repetitive - there are 3 things that Macfarlane does on every trip: bathe somewhere cold, pick up a stone and sleep in the open. There are only so many ways to describe this routine, without reader fatigue setting in.

There is a distance between the writer and the rest of us he does not care to bridge. Who is he? Why is he qualified to write about the wild? What relevance does it have to the rest of his life? Without answers to these questions, I can't connect with the writing and it becomes chilly and perhaps a touch preachy.

The anecdotes that provide the contrast with the description of place tend to be perfunctory and, again, repetitive. The Highland Clearances and the Potato Famine both figure. There seem to be several poets who keep mental illness at bay/achieve inspiration by walking in the countryside. There are probably general lessons about the historical reasons for some areas being people-free and our relationship with nature, but Macfarlane is coy about drawing them out.

In summary: worth reading, but Deakin is better.
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37 of 39 people found the following review helpful
By D. Elliott TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Readers will not fail to appreciate Robert Macfarlane's beautiful and evocative prose, or doubt his love of wild locations. However after his excellent `Mountains of the Mind' I found this latest book a huge disappointment. The former was more visionary and it prompted mental exploration, whereas for `The Wild Places' I was left as a bystander to physical exploration - and yet the first was `merely' short-listed for the Boardman-Tasker Award in 2003, and though not a mountaineering or climbing book `The Wild Places' won outright in 2007. So what do I know?

I understand it was after writing `Mountains of the Mind' that Robert Macfarlane met Roger Deakin, a philosophical environmentalist also producing a book - `Wildwood'. I believe Macfarlane was influenced greatly by Deakin, and much is made of their friendship with homage paid to Deakin after his untimely death. Brief reference is made to Macfarlane's own family, but it is piece-meal and insufficient to know him personally. This is unfortunate as expectations, perceptions and responses to the wild vary with the individual. I suspect not all readers will agree with Robert Macfarlane's definitions of wild places.

`The Wild Places' is presented as a series of landscape essays headed `Beechwood', `Island', Valley', `Moor', etc. in which Macfarlane describes locations, introduces characters met, refers to earlier commentators, explains historical background, and makes literary connections. I enjoyed much of this - especially for locations known to me - but I do not comprehend his adverse reaction to a night on Ben Hope, a mountain I climbed recently [May 2008]. That apart, a pattern emerges throughout the essays and it is somewhat surprising how very different locations are dealt with in similar manner. There is considerable repetition, and I am unsure about coupling of wild places with numerous episodes of skinny-dipping in cold water, kipping out in storms, shinning up trees, or hoarding of momentos.

What I do acknowledge positively is Macfarlane's emphasis on wild places as quite different from wilderness. Indeed he provides evidence of how wild places do not have to be in the wilderness but can be found at locations with easy access from almost anywhere. Though readers are largely treated as observers to Macfarlane's actions, they should be inspired to re-assess locations they already know, and to search out something further.
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105 of 115 people found the following review helpful
Born to be wild 16 Sep 2007
By russell clarke TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
There appears to be a burgeoning body of writers/broadcasters who sense we are on the cusp of losing something we have always had , and maybe taken for granted . TV like "Mountain" and "Coast" and books from the likes of Mark Cocker and Alice Oswald urge us to re-connect with our landscape and nature itself as not only are we detached from what is around us but there may soon come a time when these opportunities become increasingly difficult to seek out.
The Wild Places is an attempt to put us back in touch with this elemental communication with our landscape but is also an attempt to physically seek out these places and see if they actually do still exist. If that sounds a bit "Star Trek" it's not meant to, but there is a tangible sense of discovering and exploring to this book so maybe its more pertinent than you thought.
Macfarlane travels the British Isles from his Cambridge base to the windswept wilds of Scotland ,the far west coasts of Wales and Ireland but also find places " where the evidence of human presence was minimal or absent" in lanes in Dorset, the Norfolk coast and the Peak District. He shows admirable commitment to his project bivouacking in woods, dunes , and rocky hollows. He even spends a frigid uncomfortable night in mid-winter on the summit of Ben Hope , one of the times he feels "no companionship with the land" and who can blame him.
This is also a book about ecological damage as well but comes across more as a lament than judgemental hectoring .Much of Britain's wilderness has been destroyed not only in reality but in the abstractions of our minds. We view the landscape through road maps and sat nav and we need he feels , a new cartography that links "headlands ,cliffs beaches, mountaintops, tors ,forests, river-mouths and waterfalls."
Like Mark Cocker MacFarlane is a gifted writer , able to conjure up scenes and images with vivid descriptive prose with out over doing it or resorting to florid overkill. He describes a flock of doves as "applauding in the sky" or the salt marshes of Essex as "tumultuous , green joyous" . This book asks us to consider that these wild places are not necessarily about "asperity but about luxuriance , vitality ,fun". With writers like McFarlane around it's unlikely we will lose our subconscious memory of these places but it makes you question what we have to lose and asserts "we have in many ways forgotten what the world feels like" . That's something that's difficult to argue with.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Flight of the imagination
This book takes you deep into the country of Britain and also into the human soul. It explores the depths and the hiddeness of being, living and relating to the world around us. Read more
Published 3 months ago by alibi
wild places
This guy is brilliant. Wish i could write as well as this. In depth a really interesting. Has anecdotes well worth keeping in mind. Read more
Published 4 months ago by bykerbill
Curious
It is a curious thing to read a book and, at the end, not know whether or not you have enjoyed it: but, that's how The Wild Places left me feeling! Read more
Published 5 months ago by John Dexter
The Wild Places - a review by Barry Van-Asten
This book is an exploration of the wild places of Britain and Ireland and Macfarlane writes of his accounts of journeys in the landscape, from climbing and walking to swimming and... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Mr. B. P. Van-asten
A really special book
Can I have more stars, please? This was a wonderful book from beginning to end. Every chapter entranced me and so did the idea, so eloquently expressed, that wildernesses aren't... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Pauline Fisk
The Mild Places
Nature writer, journalist and University tutor Robert MacFarlane is an enthusiastic guide to the less tamed corners of Britain. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Rotgut
I managed to finish it....just.
Tiresome, repetitive nonsense aimed at metropolitan luvvies. My spidey senses started tingling in Chapter One, when he talked authoritatively about a lump of basalt with coccoliths... Read more
Published 8 months ago by tracksterman
comments on 'the wild places'
Elegantly written and imaginatively conceived, with several powerful and challenging sequences on nature of landscape and what counts as this. Read more
Published 9 months ago by M. Cornish
Wild places
This book is wonderful - you are taken to all sorts of wild places in the British Isles - some in surprisingly ordinary locations - and on your journey you are given snippets of... Read more
Published 9 months ago by A listener
Wild Book
This is the book that I had to read for one of my university modules. If I'm being honest the prospect of reading it didn't exactly get my heart racing. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Teddy Ludford
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