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ONE OF THE GUARDIAN'S BEST NATURE BOOKS OF 2020 SHORTLISTED FOR THE
RICHARD JEFFERIES SOCIETY & WHITE HORSE BOOKSHOP LITERARY PRIZE
'Lovely: full of fascinating detail and anecdote, but the undertow
of the virus moving in real time beneath its sunlit surface gives
it a unique emotional heft.' -The Times 'A literary window into the
wonderful wild world during lockdown... a charming book.' -Daily
Mail 'An entrancing testament to nature's power to restore us to
ourselves.' -Ruth Padel Nature took on a new importance for many
people when the coronavirus pandemic arrived, providing solace in a
time of great anxiety - not least because the crisis struck at the
beginning of spring, the season of light, growth, rebirth and
renewal. Three writers, close friends but living in widely
separated, contrasting parts of the country, resolved to record
their experiences of this extraordinary spring in intimate detail,
to share with others their sense of the wonder, inspiration and
delight the natural world can offer. The Consolation of Nature is
the story of what they discovered by literally walking out from
their front doors.
'Wise, challenging and offering some unexpected laughter in the
dark, this is a rational and insightful account of the sixth great
extinction event. Peter Marren is a brilliant writer and a national
treasure.' PATRICK BARKHAM 'Thoughtful, fascinating and very
timely.' STEPHEN MOSS 'Important and thought-provoking.' CAROLINE
LUCAS, GREEN PARTY MP 'Essential reading. Marren makes a
page-turner out of Armageddon.' SIMON BARNES 'In his characteristic
style Peter Marren has humanised the story of wildlife losses with
humour and wit but also with his enormous knowledge and deep love
for the living world.' MARK COCKER We are in the midst of an
extinction event: the sixth mass extinction on earth and one
entirely caused by mankind. All species become extinct sooner or
later, but we have accelerated that natural process several
hundredfold and now, it is happening right in front of our eyes.
Extinction has a terrifying finality to it. And many species have
already been lost to us forever; there is little we can do about
that. What we can do, however, is reflect, remember, and ultimately
acknowledge the unvarnished truth. We must see the natural world as
it is, and not as we might want it to be. Our trajectory is one
that has benefited one species alone - humankind. For all other
beings, from mammals to fish, from birds to insects and coral, from
plants to lichens and fungi, the future, for better or worse, is in
our hands.
Mushrooms, the first of a major new series of books on British
natural history, provides a remarkable insight into the natural and
human world of fungi. Peter Marren, in his inimitable, relaxed
style, guides the reader through the extraordinary riches of this
often overlooked group, from the amazing diversity of forms and
lifestyles that populate the fungal landscape, to the pursuit of
edible fungi for the pot, and the complexities of identification
thrown up by our modern understanding of DNA. Throughout the book,
the author tells a story rich in detail about how we have come to
appreciate and, in some cases, fear the mushrooms and toadstools
that are such an integral part of the changing seasons. Marren also
provides a refreshingly candid view of our attempts to name
species, the role of fungi in ecosystems, and our recent efforts to
record and conserve them.
**ONE OF THE GUARDIAN'S BEST BOOKS OF 2018** Join renowned
naturalist Peter Marren on an exciting quest to see every species
of wild plant native to Britain. The mysterious Ghost Orchid blooms
in near darkness among rotting leaves on the forest floor. It
blends into the background to the point of invisibility, yet glows,
pale and ghostly. The ultimate grail of flower hunters, it has been
spotted only once in the past twenty-five years. Its few flowers
have a deathly pallor and are said to smell of over-ripe bananas.
Peter Marren has been a devoted flower finder all his life. While
the Ghost Orchid offers the toughest challenge of any wild plant,
there were fifty more British species Peter had yet to see, having
ticked off the first 1,400 rummaging in hedges, slipping down
gullies and peering in peat bogs. But he set himself the goal of
finding the remaining fifty in a single summer. As it turned out,
the wettest summer in years. This expert and emotional journey
takes Peter the length and the breadth of the British Isles, from
the dripping ancient woods of the New Forest to the storm-lashed
cliffs of Sutherland. He paddles in lakes, clambers up cliffs in
mist and rain, and walks several hundred miles, but does he manage
to find them all? Partly about plants, partly autobiography,
Chasing the Ghost is also a reminder that to engage with wild
flowers, all we need to do is look around us and enjoy what we see.
Praise for Chasing the Ghost: 'Peter Marren is the unsung hero of
Britain's nature writers' Stephen Moss, author of Dynasties 'Jolly,
quixotic and ends with real poignancy' Guardian 'A poignant
reminder to us all to engage with the wild flowers that grow around
us' i Newspaper
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