Silt Road: The Story of a Lost River

Silt Road: The Story of a Lost River

by Charles Rangeley - Wilson (Author)

Synopsis

At the foot of a chalk hill a stream rises in a silent copse, and is soon lost under the car parks and streets of the town its waters once gave life to. Captivated by the fate of this forgotten stream Charles Rangeley-Wilson sets out one winter's day to uncover its story. Distilled into the timeless passage of the river's flow, buried under the pavements that cover meadow, marsh and hill he finds dreamers and visionaries, a chronicle of paradises lost or never found, men who shaped the land and its history.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 03 Apr 2014

ISBN 10: 0099554666
ISBN 13: 9780099554660
Book Overview: The story of an obsession: Charles Rangeley-Wilson goes on a quest to find a hidden river, uncovers our vanished wilderness and the history of an English landscape lost from view

Media Reviews
A rich dowsing-out of a lost river and its stories; a passionate pursuit of landscape ghosts. -- Robert MacFarlane
A work of extraordinary power and resonance -- Melissa Harrison * Financial Times *
Passionate, persuasive and personal...it is an elegy to a fascinating world of which many of us have lost sight -- Anthony Sattin * Sunday Times *
Superb book... Its story is an acute example of the criminal disregard our nation has had for these remarkable rivers -- Mark Lloyd * BBC Countryfile *
Silt Road is that rare ting: a book that is able to marry exacting research with imaginative fluency, told in language as pliant and revealing as water * Earthlines *
Author Bio
Charles Rangeley-Wilson is an award-winning writer. He is a passionate conservationist, founder of the Wild Trout Trust and the Norfolk Rivers Trust and advisor to WWF on English chalk streams. He is the author of two books of travel and fishing writing, Somewhere Else and The Accidental Angler, which was also televised by the BBC. His other work for BBC includes the critically acclaimed film Fish! A Japanese Obsession. He lives in Norfolk with his wife and two children.