Jeremy Mynott (Author) Jeremy Mynott is a classical scholar, Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge and former Chief Executive of Cambridge University Press. He is the author of various books on wildlife and nature. Birdscapes: birds in our experience and imagination (2009) was described by one reviewer as 'the finest book ever written on why we watch birds'. His latest book, Birds in the Ancient World: Winged Words (2018), was shortlisted for the Wolfson History Prize and was a TLS 'Book of the Year'.Peter Marren (Author) Peter Marren is a nature writer and commentator, author of Bugs Britannica, Rainbow Dust, Chasing the Ghost and many other books on British plants, insects, and the countryside. He won the BSBI President's Prize for Britain's Rare Flowers, which was also runner-up for the Natural World Book Prize. He was awarded the Thackray Medal for The New Naturalists by the Society for the History of Natural History. His satirical column in British Wildlife magazine, Twitcher in the Swamp, has a cult following.He is also a Fellow of the Linnaean Society and has travelled the world in search of wildlife and has co-led wildlife tours all around Europe. He has written papers on endangered species and official reports on local extinctions. He waited until reaching an appropriately mature age before tackling the subject that energises all our efforts to preserve what is left of the world's wildlife and wild places: extinction.Michael McCarthy (Author) Michael McCarthy is one of Britain's leading writers on the environment and the natural world. As a journalist, he was the Environment Correspondent of The Times, covering the early measures taken to combat climate change, culminating in the Earth Summit at Rio de Janeiro; later he was the long-standing Environment Editor of The Independent. He has won a string of awards for his work, including Environment Journalist of The Year in the British Environment and Media Awards (three times); Specialist Writer of The Year in the British Press Awards; the Silver Medal of the Zoological Society of London; the Dilys Breeze Medal of the British Trust for Ornithology; and the Medal of the RSPB for 'outstanding services to conservation.' As an author he has written Say Goodbye to the Cuckoo (2009), a study of Britain's summer migrant birds, which was widely praised; The Moth Snowstorm: Nature and Joy (2015), which was shortlisted for the Wainwright Prize and the Richard Jefferies Prize, and described by The New York Times as "an idiosyncratic and wonderful walk through his joy of nature"; and (with Jeremy Mynott and Peter Marren)
A literary window into the wonderful wild world during lockdown...a
charming book
*Daily Mail*
A significant and beautifully written historical record of a unique
English spring
*The Harrier*
As our lives constrict again, the long spring lockdown already
seems a lifetime ago. But that beautiful and frightening time has
been perfectly captured in The Consolation of Nature by the
naturalists Michael McCarthy, Jeremy Mynott and Peter Marren. Each
reports from their home patches - Richmond, West Suffolk and North
Wessex, respectively - to describe the progress of a
record-breakingly sunny spring as human activity slowed and
stilled. As a set of nature diaries it's lovely: full of
fascinating detail and anecdote. But the undertow of the virus
moving in real time beneath its sunlit surface gives it a unique
emotional heft. When we emerge from this crisis our relationship
with the natural world must change. This book surely is a record of
the beginnings of that shift.
*The Times*
A powerful and moving reflection on the solace brought by nature
and its power as a balm for stressed-out lives
*Caroline Lucas MP*
What joy - three of our greatest nature writers in one book! What
they felt under lockdown is surely what we all felt, that primal
need to be out in nature - balm for body and soul. There's acute
and beautiful observation on every page, thrown into exquisite
relief by the poignancy of the circumstances. Against the backdrop
of anxiety and doubt, their experiences bear witness to the
inspiring and ever-hopeful lesson that nature can heal itself - and
us - if we let it.
*Isabella Tree*
The Consolation of Nature is as scintillating, perceptive and every
bit as readable as Gibert White's Selborne
*Professor Tim Birkhead, FRS*
The book is an entrancing testament to nature's power to restore us
to ourselves. To read it is to open your eyes to everything around
you, from an egg-laying butterfly to the value of cowpats. In the
company of three generous naturalists, you wander down a Lovers'
Lane of close observation plus humane imagination, into the tangled
bank of wild and hidden life that still goes on, despite all we
have done to it, in our countryside and parks. The Consolation of
Nature is a consolation in itself.
*Ruth Padel*
These three distinguished writers are all steeped in the natural
world, yet each is of highly individual sensibility and comes from
a very distinct part of the country. For all the differences
between them, they have produced a book of fundamental unity with a
singular conclusion: that coronavirus and all its consequences
reveal the central importance of nature to the British as a nation
and to humans as a species. Their message could not be more
timely.
*Mark Cocker*
Probably the best tribute to spring since Edward Thomas's In
Pursuit of Spring... A spell-binding paean to the best and worst
spring ever which shows how deeply Nature absorbs, stimulates and
nurtures us.
*Matthew Oates*
They all write superbly and their styles and perspectives are
sufficiently different to add variety to the passage... but not so
different that any grates with the others. It is so beautifully
written
*Mark Avery*
As expected from these three authors, it is beautifully written,
but it is also extremely evocative.
*Martin Harper, Global Conservation Director RSPB*
I was entranced by the close observations of wildlife by three
eloquent and experienced naturalists during the 'lockdown year',
proof, if any were needed, that nature provides succour when it is
most required
*Richard Fortey, FRS*
Credit to three of our most distinguished nature writers...This is
an entertaining and insightful diary of lockdown, which really
manages to capture the essence of the unique spring of 2020
*2020 Round-up of Nature Books*
The joy of The Consolation of Nature is the privileged glimpse into
the minds of really good naturalists - and they are admirably good.
There is much written about nature and about its importance to
humanity, and no lack of earnest rhetoric, but to see into the
intimate and personal chambers of the minds of people who love
nature, who live and breathe it, who cherish it and who find it an
endless source of wonder, this is the delight of this book. There
are no great messages, no edicts, no cajoling of our consciences,
this is simply the everyday joy that the natural world provides at
a time when we need it the most. I loved savouring it, small
sections at a time, the reading equivalent of a slice of cake with
tea - something to look forward to and enjoy for no other reason
than it is a treat. That is not to say it is without wisdom, there
is so much understated wisdom on every page, but it is for the
reader to find and absorb for themselves and to ponder in a gentle
way, like turning over a leaf and finding butterfly eggs, or
suddenly spotting a buzzard high over London. J B Haldane was right
when he said the world will not perish for lack of wonders but lack
of wonder. This is a book that infuses the reader with wonder on
every page.
*Mary Colwell-Hector*
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