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Birds have long inspired our emotional and imaginative connections to physical environments, but where did it all begin?
Hidden in the names of English towns and villages, in copses, fields, lanes and hills, are the ghostly traces of birds conjuring powerful identities for people in ancient landscapes. What are their stories and secrets? How did people encounter birds over a thousand years ago?
In The Cuckoo's Lea, Michael J. Warren sets out on the trail of these ghosts. Captivated and guided by the secrets of place names, he finds their stories entangled with his own explorations of places through birds all across England. The past is hauntingly and movingly present on timeless marshes where curlews cry, where goshawks are breeding again for the first time in centuries, through silent cuckoo-woods lost under concrete sprawl, in the winter roosts of corvids and an owl village that vanished centuries ago.
Weaving together early literature, history and ornithology, this book takes readers on a journey far into the past to contemplate the nature of place and to discover a fascinating heritage that matters deeply to us now when so many places and their birds are threatened or already gone.
Published | 05 Jun 2025 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 304 |
ISBN | 9781399412049 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Wildlife |
Illustrations | 1 black and white map. |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Fascinating and meticulously researched.
The Observer
The best statement for the importance of the medieval I've ever read. A wonderful book.
David Crystal, linguist and author of The Stories of English
Scholarly, fresh, exquisitely crafted and breathtakingly, heart-achingly beautiful, The Cuckoo's Lea weaves the human and natural history of England into a tapestry that will transform your relationship with place. Michael Warren has made a book I'll love forever.
Amy-Jane Beer, author of The Flow
I loved this beguiling exploration of how birds have long inspired emotional and imaginative human connections to physical places.
Caroline Sanderson, The Bookseller
One of the most unique works of nature writing in recent years, original in its ambition and successful in its execution. Michael Warren has written an exhilarating exploration of birds and words.
British Birds
Utterly beguiling, deeply poignant and revelatory, a cartographic overlay of language and land and our place in nature. A book with a pertinent and radical message from the past – that nature is our house, our dwelling-place and neighbourhood, from where we can chart a new course, with a very old compass.
Nicola Chester, author of On Gallows Down
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.
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