Outdoor Focus Winter 2018 | Page 13

fi nally decided, I needed to explore more thoroughly. The best way, it was clear, was by bicycle, and I took the decision to start in Dorset at Burton Bradstock near Bridport and to pedal until I reached Winteringham among the reeds on the south side of the Humber (I’d have to miss out on that sliver of oolite limestone north of the Humber, I decided). And so it was that, a couple of years ago, I fi lled my bicycle paniers ready for eight days of exploration and headed off to fi nd the very quietest back roads I could through the heart of England. The book has a little geology as well – just a smattering I sometimes have to explain to cyclists that the book is not really about the cycling. My book has other ambitions. It’s a book about landscape, about why the countryside looks the way it does. Clearly we are living at the moment in uncertain political times when, among other things, the concept of Englishness is up for debate and when there are diff erent visions about the sort of country which those of us who are English want to live in. So my interest is in exploring whether an understanding of the landscape has something to help us here. To accompany the 440 or so miles of my journey, I delve in the book into a range of subjects which I hope help to illuminate my theme: I explore aspects of social history, literature and poetry, land usage and agriculture, land ownership and, in particular, the economics of the countryside (ultimately I don’t think you can understand the nature of the countryside if you don’t explore the economic purposes that the land is put to). The book has a little geology as well – just a smattering. It’s certainly a diverse place, this England A few weeks after fi nishing the bike ride I retraced my route by car, interviewing a range of people living on the oolite limestone who, in some way or another, I felt could contribute to what I was trying to achieve. My list of interviewees ran from the chief executive of Blenheim Palace to the head mason at Lincoln Cathedral. I talked to volunteers running a community-owned village shop, those running a community agriculture scheme near Bath, the organisers of a political festival in Wellingborough and the boss of a major potato marketing company in Lincolnshire. What they told What the judges said... ‘An interesting and original concept, well executed. An appealing mix of travel writing and journalistic reportage.’ Judges Mark Whitley, editor at The Countryman Magazine; former Guild member, editor and writer Chris Bagshaw me is in the book. It’s certainly a diverse place, this England. And so the book was completed. When I was fi rst planning it, I had quite enthusiastic interest in my synopsis from the editorial side of one of the UK’s leading publishers. These days though, as we have to recognise, books are commodities. I couldn’t persuade their marketing people that a book focused on twenty- fi ve or so villages and towns from west Dorset to Lincolnshire was a concept they could sell. So the book has come out instead as a proud product of Gritstone Publishing Co-operative, the authors’ co-op which – as I’ve explained in past editions of Outdoor Focus – unites together fi ve of us who work as professional outdoor writers and which enables us to bring our books to market directly. Thank you, OWPG. I’m delighted to accept the award, for myself, for Gritstone and for anyone who loves the English countryside and wants to know it better. Highly Commended Kev Reynolds The Mountain Hut Book ‘A delightful reminder of favourite alpine hideaways — part guidebook, part reminiscence of happy days, supported by lovely photos and some interesting background stories.’ See the Summer 2018 Outdoor Focus for a review of The Mountain Hut Book. winter 2018 | Outdoor focus 13