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A century after W.H. Hudson's death, this long-overdue tribute to perhaps our most significant writer-naturalist and wildlife campaigner traces his path through a dramatic and turbulent era: from his journey to Britain from Argentina in 1874 to the unveiling of a monument and bird sanctuary in his honour 50 years later in the heart of Hyde Park.
Conor Mark Jameson has spent most of his life exploring the natural environment and communicating his enthusiasm for it to family, friends and, more recently, readers of a range of newspapers and magazines. Shrewdunnit brings together the best of these dispatches, alongside unpublished essays, in a poetic and evocative journal that inspires and delights. Jameson's prose is fresh and in places irreverent, with a hint of mischief and a dash of wit.From his back door to the peaks of New Zealand and the swamp forests of the Peruvian Amazon, he carries on the biogumentary style he perfected in his earlier books showing - never telling - how to bring nature and conservation home. He may just have invented a genre.Praise for Silent Spring Revisited"e;A vividly told, beautifully written account of the environmentalist movement of the last fifty years and his own involvement in it ... the author takes his place among the pre-eminent nature writers of our times. His clear, vivid writing skillfully weaves political and cultural history, personal observation and passionate advocacy for the conservation of our diminishing wildlife to create a book that will endure in the annals of natural history."e; Marie Winn"e;If Nick Hornby loved nature, he might write a book like this."e; Martin Harper, RSPB Director of Conservation"e;A lively read... what makes Jameson's work especially enjoyable is the personal slant..."e; Matt Merritt, Editor, Birdwatching"e;A fine writer, who brings together an artist's sensibility with a conservationist's sense of reality... a vital read."e; John Fanshawe, BirdwatchPraise for Looking for the Goshawk"e;Conor's cultured writing and enthusiasm for the natural world and the people, like him, who care about it, will carry you along through the chapters."e; Mark Avery"e;Equally stirring as his Silent Spring Revisited... a passionate detective story... descriptive, at times poetic prose..."e; Peter Goodfellow, Devon Birds
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