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The Wood For The Trees One Mans Long View Of Nature Fortey Richard

  • SKU: BELL-9361708
The Wood For The Trees One Mans Long View Of Nature Fortey Richard
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.1

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The Wood For The Trees One Mans Long View Of Nature Fortey Richard instant download after payment.

Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 93.43 MB
Pages: 320
Author: Fortey Richard
ISBN: 9781101875759, 9781101875766, 1101875755, 1101875763
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

The Wood For The Trees One Mans Long View Of Nature Fortey Richard by Fortey Richard 9781101875759, 9781101875766, 1101875755, 1101875763 instant download after payment.

From recipes for ground elder soup to musings on bumblebee varieties or gruesome tales of murder, Fortey’s enthusiasm for his new wonderland is infectious and illuminating. His style echoes the great Gilbert White and his approach is proudly old school. He makes clear his distaste for “fuzzy” romanticism and the intruding emotions of the observer, but he too is romantic at times, not least in his resolve to collect things found in, or created from, his patch of wood. Mouse-gnawed cherry stones, glass made from flint, fallen birds’ eggs are among the things he preserves in a cabinet made from his own timber.

Of course, collections are the trade of scientists and curators too, and it’s clear old habits die hard. With some help from friends at the Natural History Museum, Fortey begins a deep analysis of the wood and its inhabitants – trees, insects, animals, plants and minerals. He starts with the substrate, slicing buried flint and putting it under a microscope to identify its origins, and ends up on a cherry picker in the canopy, all in the name of cataloguing the wood’s many mice, moths, bats, beetles, butterflies, crane flies, spiders, parasitic wasps, orchids, centipedes, millipedes and weird and wonderful fungi. These long taxonomies could easily be dry and exhausting, but they come alive thanks to Fortey’s vivid descriptions. Flat-backed millipedes “look as if they were assembled from some kind of kit that clicks together to make miniature armoured trains”; the Lithobius variegatus centipede’s striped legs stick out “like oars from a Viking ship, bent on pillage”.

Interwoven with these records are peripatetic investigations into human stories, from this patch’s iron age incarnation through Henley’s boom as a thriving river town supplying timber to the capital, up to the recent snapping up and fencing off of surrounding land by oligarchs and bankers. Along the way, Fortey unearths his wood’s changing fortunes.

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