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The Living Mountain :A Celebration of the Cairngorm Mountains of Scotland - Canons

4.27 ( 9,065 Ratings by Goodreads)
The Living Mountain

The Living Mountain :A Celebration of the Cairngorm Mountains of Scotland - Canons

4.27 (9,065 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 18 August, 2011
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Description

'The finest book ever written on nature and landscape in Britain' Guardian

Introduction by Robert Macfarlane. Afterword by Jeanette Winterson

In this masterpiece of nature writing, Nan Shepherd describes her journeys into the Cairngorm mountains of Scotland. There she encounters a world that can be breathtakingly beautiful at times and shockingly harsh at others. Her intense, poetic prose explores and records the rocks, rivers, creatures and hidden aspects of this remarkable landscape.

Shepherd spent a lifetime in search of the 'essential nature' of the Cairngorms; her quest led her to write this classic meditation on the magnificence of mountains, and on our imaginative relationship with the wild world around us. Composed during the Second World War, the manuscript of The Living Mountain lay untouched for more than thirty years before it was finally published.

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780857861832
ISBN10 0857861832
Number Of Pages 160
Item Weight 134 g
Product Dimensions 129 x 198 x 9 mm
Publisher / Reseller Canongate Books
Format paperback
Edition Main - Canons Imprint Re-issue
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Media Reviews

The finest book ever written on nature and landscape in Britain * * Guardian * *
A slender masterpiece - a meditation on Shepherd's lifelong relationship with the Cairngorm mountains . . . It is both intensely engaged with its specific setting, and gyring outwards to vaster questions of knowledge, existence and - a word Shepherd uses sparingly but tellingly - love -- ROBERT MACFARLANE
A cherished literary classic . . . in a world of self-help, this is true inspiration, deeply admirable without the distance of heroism, bracing without stridency and, ultimately, generous * * New York Times Book Review * *
Reading [The Living Mountain] seems to me to explain why reading is so important. And odd. And necessary. And not like anything else. There is no substitute for reading -- JEANETTE WINTERSON
Nan Shepherd's prose is as bracing as water from a mountain stream . . . If you read it, you too will feel changed. This is sublime, in the 18th-century sense, when landscapes like these were terrifying. And she achieves it in language that is almost incantatory, like a spell * * Guardian * *
A masterpiece . . . Amongst the greatest works of nature writing to come out of Britain * * Scotsman * *
A classic of nature writing for good reason * * Washington Post * *
An impressionistic and weather infused memoir of her experiences of walking and living in the wild landscape of the Cairngorms . . . A key influence on modern nature writers such as Robert Macfarlane * * Herald * *
A treasure both as a piece of nature writing and as a record of Shepherd's almost mystical relationship with the landscape . . . Her reflections emerge from unbounded curiosity paired with deep knowledge of the place and its rhythms * * Atlantic * *
I absolutely loved The Living Mountain - part memoir, part field notebook, part lyrical meditation on nature and our relationship with it, evocative of Rachel Carson and Henry Beston and John Muir -- MARIA POPOVA

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GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

Anna (Nan) Shepherd was born in 1893 and died in 1981. Closely attached to Aberdeen and her native Deeside, she graduated from her home university in 1915 and for the next forty-one years worked as a lecturer in English. An enthusiastic gardener and hill-walker, she made many visits to the Cairngorms with students and friends. She also travelled further afield - to Norway, France, Italy, Greece and South Africa - but always returned to the house where she was raised and where she lived almost all of her adult life, in the village of West Cults, three miles from Aberdeen on North Deeside.

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