The celebrated novelist and writer Ronald Blythe takes us on an unforgettable tour of Britain, tracing in its hills and water meadows, in its city streets and along its shores, signs of a rich spiritual ancestry. Black-and-white photography throughout.
Ronald Blythe CBE was one of the UK's greatest living writers. His work, which won countless awards, includes Akenfield (a Penguin 20th-Century Classic and a feature film), Private Words, Field Work, Outsiders: A Book of Garden Friends and numerous other titles. He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and was awarded their prestigious Benson Medal in 2006. In 2017, he was appointed CBE for services to literature
Ronald Blythe takes us on a tour of the landscapes that influenced some of Britain's most famous religious and most famous writers, from Saints Cedd and Aidan, Julian of Norwich, William Langland, the martyrs of the Tudor and Stewart reigns, and on through Thomas Hardy and Arnold Bennett. He visits the places where they lived and died and shows the influences of these locales on how they conducted their lives, and on what they thought and said and wrote. The book is full of the beautiful black and white photos of Edwin Smith, but it is Blythe's prose that brings these scenes and people to life. Beautifully and wonderfully written.
This is a very personal take on the history of the church in England as seen through a combination of English landscape and English literature. I am very impressed by the depth of Blythe’s knowledge and understanding of our literature and the places associated with it. Beautifully illustrated. I now know more about the martyrs of the reformation than I care for!