Raynor Winn is the bestselling author of The Salt Path and The Wild Silence. The Salt Path won the inaugural RSL Christopher Bland Prize and was shortlisted for the 2018 Costa Biography Award and the Wainwright Golden Beer Book Prize. The Wild Silence was shortlisted for the 2021 Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing. She is a regular long-distance walker and writes about nature, homelessness and our relationship to the land. She lives in Cornwall with her husband Moth.
Raynor Winn has done it again. She's achieved a miracle, defying
all odds and walking 1,000 miles with her beloved husband Moth. But
she has also given her vast army of fans - both armchair hikers and
the real thing - another wondrous book, full of compassion, humour,
insights, closeness to nature and true, bloody-minded grit. An
inspiration.
*Isabella Tree, author of Wilding*
As well as a portrait of a telepathic marriage of true minds, and a
snapshot of a fretful island, this is a soaring lament and a
tub-thumping tirade - for all that is being lost, for all that may
yet be saved
*Telegraph*
An inspiring and beautifully written story of hope and healing . .
. We, her readers, are privileged to walk alongside her
*Countryfile*
An inspirational story of love and endurance; of trails offering
links to ancient times. But it's clear-eyed, too, on the future
we're shaping
*Telegraph, 'Best travel books to buy for Christmas 2022'*
Another heartwarming odyssey, this time on one of the wildest walks
in Britain . . . Winn seems to have a bird's-eye view of Britain -
a map at her feet, a keen eye for detail, particularly for social
injustice. Hers is a voice of empathy and integrity
*GUARDIAN*
Fans of The Salt Path will love this moving continuation of Raynor
and her husband Moth's journey . . . Alongside beautiful nature
writing, there are thought-provoking observations on our
countryside and the threat it is under
*Good Housekeeping*
A tale of remarkable resilience and nature writing at its best
*i*
Their journey from remote Scotland to the South West coast Path
makes for inspiring reading
*Boundless*
Each step is recorded in luminous prose
*Wanderlust*
A captivating reflection on nature and the lines that divide and
shape countries and people
*Sainsbury's Magazine*
If you enjoyed The Salt Path . . . you'll love Raynor Winn's latest
book, Landlines
*Yours Magazine*
The reader . . . may struggle to keep a dry eye
*Geographical*
Winn has a gift for making her account profoundly human . . . In
exploring what it means to be seeing a landscape possibly for the
last time, it achieves moments of rare vision and compassion
*Spectator*
If you followed Raynor and husband Moth on The Salt Path, you will
thrill to join them on this epic walk, from Scotland's wild and
beautiful Cape Wrath Trail. Miracles might just happen when you put
your best foot forward
*Saga Magazine*
I like the realism of her writing, about all the practicalities and
discomforts, the midge bites, the blisters and the endless
comforting cups of tea. All of this is underpinned by the deep love
of a long marriage. Winn writes with a personal and passionate
appreciation of nature
*Perceptive Travel*
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