Rural communities

  • Lost Skills and Crafts Handbook

    £16.99

    In this inspirational and practical guide to country life, passionate and hugely knowledgeable countryman Alan Titchmarsh explores the heritage of rural Britain, its landscapes and wildlife, its traditions, customs and crafts.

  • Himalaya

    £10.99

    This title provides a major history of the Himalaya. The book is an epic story of peoples, cultures, and adventures among the world’s highest mountains. Spanning millennia, from its earliest inhabitants to the present conflicts over Tibet and Everest, Himalaya is a soaring account of resilience and conquest, discovery and plunder, oppression and enlightenment at the ‘roof of the world’.

  • Close to Where the Heart Gives Out: A Year in the Life of an Orkney Doctor

    £16.99

    Set in the wild and remote landscape of Eday, part of the Orkney archipelago, Close to Where the Heart Gives Out is an unflinchingly honest and moving tale of rural life, from the only doctor on the island.

  • The Old Religion: Dark and Chillingly Atmospheric.

    £7.99

    The Cornish village of St Petroc is the sort of place where people come to hide. Tom Killgannon is one such person. An ex-undercover cop, Tom is in the Witness Protection Programme hiding from some very violent people and St Petroc’s offers him a chance to live a safe and quiet life. Until he meets Lila. Lila is a seventeen-year-old runaway. When she breaks into Tom’s house she takes more than just his money. His wallet holds everything about his new identity. He also knows that Lila is in danger from the travellers’ commune she’s been living at. Something sinister has been going on there and Lila knows more than she realises. But to find her he risks not only giving away his location to the gangs he’s in hiding from, but also becoming a target for whoever is hunting Lila.

  • Remarkable Village Cricket Grounds

    £25.00

    In the original book he covered some of the largest stadia where cricket is played throughout the world. In Remarkable Village Cricket Grounds he concentrates on the smallest.

  • Old Religion

    £12.99

    Welcome to the dark heart of Cornwall. He was running from his past. She was running from her future. Sometimes helping a stranger is the last thing you should do. The Cornish village of St Petroc is the sort of place where people come to hide. Tom Killgannon is one such person. An ex-undercover cop, Tom is in the Witness Protection Programme hiding from some very violent people and St Petroc’s offers him a chance to live a safe and quiet life. Until he meets Lila. Lila is a 17-year-old runaway. When she breaks into Tom’s house she takes more than just his money. His wallet holds everything about his new identity. He also knows that Lila is in danger from the travellers’ commune she’s been living at. Something sinister has been going on there and Lila knows more than she realises.

  • Summer

    £3.50

    ‘Vintage Minis’ bring you the world’s greatest writers on the experiences that make us human – from birth to death and everything in between.

  • Shepherds Life

    Shepherds Life

    £10.99

    Some people’s lives are entirely their own creations. James Rebanks’ isn’t. The first son of a shepherd, who was the first son of a shepherd himself, he and his family have lived and worked in and around the Lake District for generations. Their way of life is ordered by the seasons and the work they demand, and has been for hundreds of years.

  • The Illustrated Herdwick Shepherd

    £16.99

    James Rebanks interweaves thoughts and reflections on the art of shepherding with his photographs of the Matterdale valley and the people and animals that make up the daily life of the fells. A document of the lives lived by the 30 surviving fell farming families, this is a book of photos and words filled with reverence and love.

  • Akenfield

    £9.99

    ‘The best portrait of rural life in England’ Roger Deakin‘Exquisite’ John Updike‘The finest contemporary writer on the English countryside’ Observer Ronald Blythe’s perceptive and vivid evocation of the rural Suffolk he had known since childhood was acclaimed as an instant classic when it was published in 1969. It reverberates with the voices of the village…

  • Cider With Rosie

    £8.99

    This is a vivid memoir of childhood in a remote Cotswold village, a village before electricity or cars, a timeless place on the verge of change. Growing up amongst the fields and woods and characters of the place, Laurie Lee depicts a world that is both immediate and real and belonging to a now distant past.