‘A lovely companion [to Duncan Hamilton’s The Great Romantic] in a charming jacket with an excellent introduction by Gideon Haigh.’
The Daily Mail reviews A Field of Tents and Waving Colours
The Daily Mail reviews A Field of Tents and Waving Colours, along with Duncan Hamilton’s The Great Romantic, and Roger Alton celebrates ‘two beautiful books’, and in particular ‘a beautiful little collection of the best of Cardus’s writing’.
A great review for The Flying Boat That Fell to Earth in Flypast magazine
An excellent review in the August issue of Flypast, the largest-circulation monthly newsstand magazine on aviation, praises The Flying Boat That Fell to Earth as an ‘evocative exploration of the golden age of air travel.’ ‘Beautifully written’, it concludes, ‘with poetic strains and a hint of melancholy in places, Coster’s book is a fine homage to the flying boat.’
Country Walking magazine features Yorkshire Coast Path
Country Walking, the UK’s bestselling walking magazine, has just featured Yorkshire Coast Path in its July issue as one of ‘Two Coastal Corkers’, noting its ‘detailed route descriptions, OS mapping and in-depth features on points of interest along the way’.
London Street Trees in the London Magazine
Paul Wood, author of London’s Street Trees (now in its third printing) and now London Is A Forest (Quadrille), has an article on the capital’s trees in the latest issue of the London Magazine.
A Hackney street tree walk with London Street Trees' Paul Wood
The Yorkshire Post's Saturday magazine devotes its cover and a feature to Yorkshire Coast Path
On Saturday 13 April the Yorkshire Post devoted the front cover of its colour magazine and a feature inside to Andrew Vine’s new Yorkshire Coast Path walking guide. A second feature follows next week.
Andrew Vine talks about Yorkshire Coast Path to a thousand people at Y19
Every year Welcome to Yorkshire, the tourism organisation for Yorkshire, organises a huge conference for tourism providers, and this year, at Y19 at the Royal Armouries in Leeds, Yorkshire Coast Path’s author Andrew Vine was interviewed by BBC presenter Rob Walker about the book in front of no fewer than 1,000 delegates.
London's Street Trees inspires a new street tree planting in South London
Such has been the influence of Paul Wood’s London Street Trees book that it has already inspired more than one community-led planting of new street trees, of species championed by the author in it. A line of Persian Silk trees now runs beside Brockley Station, while the author himself assisted with the planting of this new Kentucky Coffee tree in Deptford. The project was sponsored by the Deptford Folk, who also provided the picture.
Harriet Walter and Tom Hollander read Unsent Letters at the How To: Academy
A truly stellar cast assembled at the Tabernacle in Notting Hill for the How To: Academy’s event on Caroline Atkins’ What a Hazard a Letter Is. Two hundred people filled the converted church to hear Harriet Walter, Tom Hollander, Tuppence Middleton and Nina Toussaint reading out letters from the book, each introduced by Caroline. Highlights included Harriet Walter as Virginia Woolf and Oscar Wilde, Tuppence Middleton as Katherine Mansfield, and Tom Hollander reading Captain Scott’s last letter to his wife.