|
Showing 1 - 24 of
24 matches in All Departments
SHORTLISTED FOR THE COSTA BIOGRAPHY AWARD 2019 'This is a book of
wonders' Sunday Times 'Spellbinding and intelligent' Financial
Times 'Extraordinary and engrossing' Spectator It was the most
extraordinary year. In a book brimming with poetry and nature
writing, biography and adventure, Adam Nicolson walks in the
footsteps of Coleridge, Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy during
the months in the late 1790s they spent together in the Quantock
Hills. Out of it came The Ancient Mariner, 'Kubla Khan', Lyrical
Ballads and 'Tintern Abbey'; Coleridge's unmatched hymns to
friendship and fatherhood; Wordsworth's revolutionary verses and
paeans to the unity of soul and cosmos, love and understanding. In
short, a poetry that sought to remake the world.
LONGLISTED FOR THE WAINWRIGHT PRIZE 2022 'A remarkable and powerful
book, the rarest of things ... Nicolson is unique as a writer ... I
loved it' EDMUND DE WAAL Few places are as familiar as the shore -
and few as full of mystery and surprise. How do sandhoppers inherit
an inbuilt compass from their parents? How do crabs understand the
tides? How can the death of one winkle guarantee the lives of its
companions? What does a prawn know? In Life Between the Tides, Adam
Nicolson explores the natural wonders of the shoreline, from the
extraordinary biology of its curious animals to the flow of our
human history. This is an invitation to the water, where marvellous
things wait an inch below the surface. Previously published as The
Sea is Not Made of Water
What is the nature of things? Must I think my own way through the
world? What is justice? How can I be me? How should we treat each
other? Before the Greeks, the idea of the world was dominated by
god-kings and their priests, in a life ruled by imagined
metaphysical monsters. 2,500 years ago, in a succession of small
eastern Mediterranean harbour-cities, that way of thinking began to
change. Men (and some women) decided to cast off mental
subservience and apply their own worrying and thinking minds to the
conundrums of life. These great innovators shaped the beginnings of
philosophy. Through the questioning voyager Odysseus, Homer
explored how we might navigate our way through the world.
Heraclitus in Ephesus was the first to consider the
interrelatedness of things. Xenophanes of Colophon was the first
champion of civility. In Lesbos, the Aegean island of Sappho and
Alcaeus, the early lyric poets asked themselves ‘How can I be
true to myself?’ In Samos, Pythagoras imagined an everlasting
soul and took his ideas to Italy where they flowered again in
surprising and radical forms. Prize-winning and bestselling writer
Adam Nicolson travels through this transforming world and asks what
light these ancient thinkers can throw on our deepest
preconceptions. Sparkling with maps, photographs and artwork, How
to Be is a journey into the origins of Western thought. Hugely
formative ideas emerged in these harbour-cities: fluidity of mind,
the search for coherence, a need for the just city, a recognition
of the mutability of things, a belief in the reality of the ideal
— all became the Greeks’ legacy to the world. Born out of a
rough, dynamic—and often cruel— moment in human history, it was
the dawn of enquiry, where these fundamental questions about self,
city and cosmos, asked for the first time, became, as they remain,
the unlikely bedrock of understanding.
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to be given your own
remote islands? Thirty years ago it happened to Adam Nicolson. Aged
21, Nicolson inherited the Shiants, three lonely Hebridean islands
set in a dangerous sea off the Isle of Lewis. With only a stone
bothy for accommodation and half a million puffins for company, he
found himself in charge of one of the most beautiful places on
earth. The story of the Shiants is a story of birds and boats,
hermits and fishermen, witchcraft and catastrophe, and Nicolson
expertly weaves these elements into his own tale of seclusion on
the Shiants to create a stirring celebration of island life.
Longlisted for the 2014 Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction (now
the Bailie Gifford) 'A thrilling and complex book, enlarges our
view of Homer ... There's something that hits the mark on every
page' Claire Tomalin, Books of the Year, New Statesman Where does
Homer come from? And why does Homer matter? His epic poems of war
and suffering can still speak to us of the role of destiny in life,
of cruelty, of humanity and its frailty, but why they do is a
mystery. How can we be so intimate with something so distant? 'The
Mighty Dead' is a magical journey of discovery across wide
stretches of the past, sewn together by some of the oldest stories
we have - the great ancient poems of Homer and their metaphors of
life and trouble. In this provocative and enthralling book, Adam
Nicolson explains why Homer still matters and how these vital, epic
verses - with their focus on the eternal questions about the
individual versus the community, honour and service, love and war -
tell us how we became who we are.
WINNER OF THE WAINWRIGHT PRIZE 2018 WINNER OF THE JEFFERIES AWARD
FOR NATURE WRITING 2017 The full story of seabirds from one of the
greatest nature writers. The book looks at the pattern of their
lives, their habitats, the threats they face and the passions they
inspire - beautifully illustrated by Kate Boxer. Seabirds are
master navigators, thriving in the most demanding environment on
earth. In this masterly book, drawing on all the most recent
research, Adam Nicolson follows them to the coasts and islands of
Scotland, Ireland, Iceland, Norway, and the Americas. Beautifully
illustrated by Kate Boxer, The Seabird's Cry is a celebration of
the wonders of the only creatures at home in the air, on land and
on the sea. It also carries a warning: the number of seabirds has
dropped by two-thirds since 1950. Extinction stalks the ocean and
there is a danger that the grand cry of a seabird colony will this
century become little but a memory.
|
Poems of the Sea (Hardcover)
Adam Nicolson; Edited by Gaby Morgan
|
R280
R219
Discovery Miles 2 190
Save R61 (22%)
|
Ships in 5 - 10 working days
|
Poems of the Sea is an anthology of classic poetry that celebrates
the sea; from the power of a stormy ocean to ships and sailors and
beaches strewn with shells. Part of the Macmillan Collector's
Library; a series of stunning, pocket-sized classics with ribbon
markers. These beautiful books make perfect gifts or a treat for
any book lover. This edition features an introduction by author
Adam Nicolson. For generations, poets have taken inspiration from
ocean mists and rugged coastlines to conjure up adventures on the
high seas and joyous days at the seaside. From Emily Dickinson's
morning dog walks by the shore, to the river running through Sara
Teasdale's sunny valley, and from Walt Whitman's fish-filled
forests, to the silent ships passing in Paul Laurence Dunbar's dark
ocean, there are poems here for every reader to enjoy.
Accompanied by an eight-part series, this is the story of Adam
Nicolson's adventure in a small boat around the western coast of
the British Isles. Early in the year, Adam Nicolson decided to
leave his comfy life at home on a Sussex farm and go on an
adventure. Equipped with the Auk, a forty-two-foot wooden ketch,
and a friend who at least knew how to sail, he set off up the
Atlantic coasts of the British Isles: Cornwall to Scilly, over to
Pembrokeshire and the west of Ireland, to the Hebrides and its
offliers, St Kilda and North Rona, before heading on to Orkney, and
finally to the Faroes, a two hundred mile leap out into the autumn
winds of the North Atlantic. But the book is not just a travel
journal. Adam Nicolson writes of his own yearnings for the sea and
for wide open spaces. His year is strung between the competing
claims of leaving and belonging, of thinking that no life could be
more exhilarating than battling a big gale driving in out of the
Atlantic and of wanting to be back, in harbour, safe, still and
protected. Running throughout the book is a dialogue within the
author himself between the attractions of home and not home, the
certainties of what you know and the seductions of what you don't.
Reflective and poetic, this book is full of rich experience. It is
a story passionately engaged with the beauty and marvels of the
wild Atlantic coast, but is also a self-portrait of a man in the
middle of his life who is determined to find out what it's all for.
A fascinating depiction from award-winning author, Adam Nicolson,
of a family and a country on the hinge of modernisation. Was our
country once a better place? Has modernisation destroyed as much as
it has improved? And can we see in an earlier Britain a way of
living, an Arcadia, which now seems both ideal and remote? Through
16th- and 17th-century England, the changes of an approaching
modernity accelerated. With the growing power of the state, the
disruption of the traditional bonds of society, the breaking of
communities and the marginalisation of the great families who had
once balanced the power of the crown, the new mercantile,
individualist world increasingly clashed with the communal and
chivalric ideals of the old. To tell this story from the 1520s to
the 1640s, Adam Nicolson takes a single great family, the Earls of
Pembroke, their wives, children, estates, tenants and allies, and
follows their high and glamorous trajectory across three
generations of change, nostalgia, ambition, resistance and war.
'Arcadia' is a rich and detailed evocation of England on the hinge
of medieval and modern, and in this wide-ranging book Adam Nicolson
explores a world in transition, moving from the intrigues,
alliances and vendettas of the court to the intricate, everyday
business of rural communities managing their affairs in times of
stress. It was an England caught up in its first taste of
modernity, yet divided over how to react to it, split between the
old and the new, the moment at which the world we have lost turned
into the world it has now become.
An unforgettable look at the contradictions of heroism, as embodied
by Horatio Nelson and as tested by the battle of Trafalgar. Adam
Nicolson looks at the variety of qualities - ruthlessness, bravery,
kindness, cruelty - that combined in both Nelson and his troops to
carry that fateful day. Trafalgar gripped the nineteenth century
imagination like no other battle: it was a moment of both
transcendent fulfilment and unmatched despair. It was a drama of
such violence and sacrifice that the concept of total war may be
argued to start from there. It finished the global ambitions of a
European tyrant but culminated in the death of Admiral Horatio
Nelson, the greatest hero of the era. This book fuses the immediate
intensity of the battle with the deeper currents that were running
at the time. It has a three-part framework: the long, slow six hour
morning before the battle; the afternoon itself of terror, death
and destruction; and the shocked, exultant and sobered aftermath,
which finds its climax at Nelson's funeral in a snowy London the
following January. Adam Nicolson examines the concept of heroes and
heroism, both then and now, using Nelson as one of the greatest
examples. A man of complexity and contradiction, he was a supreme
administrator of ships and men; overflowing with humanity, charm
and love but also capable of astonishing ruthlessness and ferocity.
Nelson's own courage, vanity, ruthlessness and sweetness made him
one of the great identifiable heroes of English history. In Men of
Honour, Adam Nicolson also traces the stories of many unknown
people of the day. He tackles the move from the age of reason to
the age of romanticism, and examines a battle that was not only a
uniquely well-documented crisis in human affairs but also a lens on
its own time. Adam Nicolson does not approach Trafalgar as a
military historian. His book gives a wonderfully immediate
recreation of both the battle itself and its aftermath in a rich,
concrete and intellectually engaging style.
A fascinating account from award-winning author Adam Nicolson on
the history of Nicolson's own national treasure, his family home:
Sissinghurst.
Sissinghurst is world famous as a place of calm and beauty, a
garden slipped into the ruins of a rose-pink Elizabethan palace.
But is it entirely what its creators intended? Has its success over
the last thirty years come at a price? Is Sissinghurst everything
it could be? The story of this piece of land, an estate in the
Weald of Kent, is told here for the first time from the very
beginning. Adam Nicolson, who now lives there, has uncovered
remarkable new findings about its history as a medieval manor and
great sixteenth-century house, from the days of its decline as an
eighteenth-century prison to a flourishing Victorian farm and on to
the creation, by his grandparents Vita Sackville-West and Harold
Nicolson, of a garden in a weed-strewn wreck. Alongside his
recovery of the past, Adam Nicolson wanted something else: for the
land at Sissinghurst to live again, to become the landscape of
orchards, cattle, fruit and sheep he remembered from his
boyhood.Could that living frame of a mixed farm be brought back to
what had turned into monochrome fields of chemicalised wheat and
oilseed rape? Against the odds, he was going to try. Adam Nicolson
has always been a passionate writer about landscape and buildings,
but this is different. This is the place he wanted to make good
again, reconnecting garden, farm and land. More than just a
personal biography of a place, this book is the story of taking an
inheritance and steering it in a new direction, just as an
entrepreneur might take hold of a company, or just as all of us
might want to take our dreams and make them real.
"From the Hardcover edition."
The Smell of Summer Grass is the story of the years spent in
finding and building a personal idyll, sometimes a dream, sometimes
a nightmare, by writer Adam Nicolson and his wife, cook and
gardener, Sarah Raven. Without knowing one end of a hay baler from
the other, Adam Nicolson and Sarah Raven, fed up with London and
with life, escaped with his family to a run-down farm in the Sussex
Weald. Looking for Arcadia, they found a mixture of intense beauty
and profound chaos. Over three years they struggled with dock
leaves, spring flowers, bloody-minded sheep and neighbours before
eventually arriving at some kind of equilibrium. Funny, poetic,
ironic and wise, 'The Smell of Summer Grass' is based partly on the
long out of print 'Perch Hill'. It traces the growing intimacy
between man and his chosen place, his love affair with it and his
frustrations with its intractable realities. As an attempt to live
out the pastoral vision, it makes one heartfelt plea: we should
never abandon our dreams.
When we read the book of nature, what do we read there? "All things
bright and beautiful, all creatures great and small, all things
wise and wonderful, the Lord God made them all," says a well-known
hymn. This issue of Plough celebrates the creatures of our planet -
plant, animal, and human - and the implications of humankind's
relationship to nature. But if nature can be read as a book that
reveals the wisdom of its Creator, it also reveals things less
lovely than stars and singing birds - a world of desperate
competition for survival, mass extinctions, and deadly viruses. Is
such a world a convincing argument for the Creator's goodness?
Turns out Christians and skeptics alike have been asking such
questions since long before Darwin added a twist. Are we moderns
out of practice at reading the book of nature? And if we forget
how, will we fail to read human nature as well - what rights or
purposes our Creator may have endowed us with? What then is there
to limit the bounds of technological manipulation of humankind?
This issue of Plough explores these and other fascinating questions
about the natural world and our place in it. In this issue: -
Sussex farmer Adam Nicholson evokes centuries of handwork that
shaped the landscape of the Weald. - Gracy Olmstead revisits the
land her forebears farmed in Idaho. - Ian Marcus Corbin tries
walking phoneless to better note the beauty of the natural world. -
Amish farmer John Kempf, a leader in regenerative agriculture,
foresees a healthier future for farming. - Leah Libresco Sargeant
offers a feminist critique of society's war on women's bodies. -
Ivan Bernal Marin visits Panama City's traditional fishermen. -
Maureen Swinger recalls to triumphs of second grade in forest
school. - Edmund Waldstein questions head transplants and the
limits of medical science. - Kelsey Osgood says it's natural to
fear death, and to transcend that fear through faith. - Tim Maendel
lifts the veil on urban beekeeping along the Manhattan skyline.
You'll also find: - An essay by Christian Wiman on the poetry of
doubt and faith - New poems by Alfred Nicol - A profile of Amazon
activist nun Dorothy Stang - An appreciation of Keith Green's songs
- Insights on creation from Blaise Pascal, Julian of Norwich,
Francis of Assisi, Mechthild of Magdeburg, Christopher Smart,
Augustine of Hippo, The Book of Job, and Sadhu Sundar Singh -
Reviews of The Opening of the American Mind, and Kazuo Ishiguro's
Klara and the Sun Plough Quarterly features stories, ideas, and
culture for people eager to put their faith into action. Each issue
brings you in-depth articles, interviews, poetry, book reviews, and
art to help you put Jesus' message into practice and find common
cause with others.
Adam Nicolson tells the story of England through the history of
fourteen gentry families - from the 15th century to the present
day. This sparkling work of history reads like a real-life Downton
Abbey, as the loves, hatreds and many times of grief of his chosen
cast illuminate the grand events of history. We may well be 'a
nation of shopkeepers', but for generations England was a country
dominated by its middling families, rooted on their land, in their
locality, with a healthy interest in turning a profit from their
property and a deep distrust of the centralised state. The virtues
we may all believe to be part of the English culture - honesty,
affability, courtesy, liberality - each of these has their source
in gentry life cultivated over five hundred years. These folk were
the backbone of England. Adam Nicolson's riveting new book
concentrates on fourteen families, from 1400 to the present day.
From the medieval gung-ho of the Plumpton family to the high-seas
adventures of the Lascelles in the eighteenth century, to more
modern examples, the book provides a chronological picture of the
English, seen through these intimate, passionate, powerful stories
of family saga. Drawing on a wealth of unpublished archive
material, here is a vivid depiction of the life and code of the
gentry. 'The Gentry' is first and foremost a wonderful sweep of
English history, shedding light on the creation of the distinctive
English character but with the sheer readability of an epic novel.
Now, when this unwritten history of our relationship with the land
is under persistent attack from development, agrochemicals and
genetic engineering, poetry raises questions about the real
partnership between humankind and nature that fields represent.
This anthology brings together the work of more than ninety poets,
ancient and modern, including Wendell Berry, John Betjeman, John
Burnside, Helen Dunmore, Ivor Gurney, Seamus Heaney, Elizabeth
Jennings, John Keats, Alice Oswald, Kathleen Raine and Walt
Whitman.
|
The Iliad (Paperback)
W.H.D. Rouse; Afterword by Adam Nicolson
|
R213
R183
Discovery Miles 1 830
Save R30 (14%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
THE WORLD S GREATEST WAR NOVEL
Humans and gods wrestling with towering emotions. Men fighting to the death amid devastation and destruction. Perhaps the Western world s first and best storyteller, Homer draws the reader in with bated breath. His masterful tale contains some of the most famous episodes in all of literature: the curse on the prophet Cassandra; the siege of Troy; the battle between Hector and Achilles; the face that launched a thousand ships; and of course, the deception of the Trojan Horse. To this day, the heroism and adventure of "The Iliad" have remained unmatched in song and story.
In his plain English translation, W.H.D. Rouse makes a point to keep the language as colloquial as Homer s original was, never pedantic, high-flown, or cliched. In fact, it is the nearest contemporary English equivalent to the epic Homer s audience heard at their banquets.
What is the nature of things? Must I think my own way through the
world? What is justice? How can I be me? How should we treat each
other? Before the Greeks, the idea of the world was dominated by
god-kings and their priests, in a life ruled by imagined
metaphysical monsters. 2,500 years ago, in a succession of small
eastern Mediterranean harbour-cities, that way of thinking began to
change. Men (and some women) decided to cast off mental
subservience and apply their own worrying and thinking minds to the
conundrums of life. These great innovators shaped the beginnings of
philosophy. Through the questioning voyager Odysseus, Homer
explored how we might navigate our way through the world.
Heraclitus in Ephesus was the first to consider the
interrelatedness of things. Xenophanes of Colophon was the first
champion of civility. In Lesbos, the Aegean island of Sappho and
Alcaeus, the early lyric poets asked themselves ‘How can I be
true to myself?’ In Samos, Pythagoras imagined an everlasting
soul and took his ideas to Italy where they flowered again in
surprising and radical forms. Prize-winning writer Adam Nicolson
travels through this transforming world and asks what light these
ancient thinkers can throw on our deepest preconceptions. Sparkling
with maps, photographs and artwork, How to Be is a journey into the
origins of Western thought. Hugely formative ideas emerged in these
harbour-cities: fluidity of mind, the search for coherence, a need
for the just city, a recognition of the mutability of things, a
belief in the reality of the ideal — all became the Greeks’
legacy to the world. Born out of a rough, dynamic—and often
cruel— moment in human history, it was the dawn of enquiry, where
these fundamental questions about self, city and cosmos, asked for
the first time, became, as they remain, the unlikely bedrock of
understanding.
Spanning the most turbulent and dramatic years of English
history--from the 1520s through 1650--"Quarrel with the King" tells
the remarkable saga of one of the greatest families in English
history, the Pembrokes, following their glamorous trajectory across
three generations of change, ambition, resistance, and war. With
vivid color and fascinating detail, acclaimed historian Adam
Nicolson recounts the story of a century-long power struggle
between England's richest family and the English Crown--a
fascinating study of divided loyalties, corruption, rights and
privilege, and all the ambiguities involved in the exercise and
maintenance of power and status.
In October 1805 Lord Horatio Nelson, the most brilliant sea
commander who ever lived, led the British Royal Navy to a
devastating victory over the Franco-Spanish fleets at the great
battle of Trafalgar. It was the foundation of Britain's
nineteenth-century world-dominating empire. Adam Nicolson's "Seize
the Fire" is not only a close and revealing portrait of a legendary
hero in his final action but also a vivid account of the brutal
realities of battle; it asks the questions: Why did the winners
win? What was it about the British, their commanders and their men,
their beliefs and their ambitions, that took them to such
overwhelming victory?
|
You may like...
Elvis
Baz Luhrmann
Blu-ray disc
R191
R171
Discovery Miles 1 710
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|