100 books
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1 voter
Psychogeography Books
Showing 1-50 of 723
Psychogeography (Pocket Essential series)
by (shelved 36 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.32 — 790 ratings — published 2006
London Orbital (Paperback)
by (shelved 24 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.69 — 856 ratings — published 2002
Wanderlust: A History of Walking (Paperback)
by (shelved 15 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.90 — 6,481 ratings — published 2014
The Rings of Saturn (Paperback)
by (shelved 15 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.22 — 17,886 ratings — published 1995
A Field Guide to Getting Lost (Paperback)
by (shelved 15 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.90 — 21,085 ratings — published 2005
Psychogeography: Disentangling the Modern Conundrum of Psyche and Place (Hardcover)
by (shelved 15 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.59 — 408 ratings — published 2007
Invisible Cities (Paperback)
by (shelved 14 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.09 — 98,501 ratings — published 1972
The Old Ways: A Journey on Foot (Hardcover)
by (shelved 13 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.12 — 11,688 ratings — published 2012
Hawksmoor (Paperback)
by (shelved 12 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.46 — 4,977 ratings — published 1985
The Poetics of Space (Paperback)
by (shelved 12 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.18 — 11,346 ratings — published 1957
Flâneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice and London (Hardcover)
by (shelved 10 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.58 — 4,192 ratings — published 2017
Lights Out for the Territory: 9 Excursions in the Secret History of London (Paperback)
by (shelved 10 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.92 — 406 ratings — published 1997
The Old Straight Track (Its Mounds, Beacons, Moats, Sites and Mark Stones)
by (shelved 9 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.64 — 243 ratings — published 1925
Lud Heat: A Book of Dead Hamlets (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.67 — 109 ratings — published 1975
Scarp: In Search of London's Outer Limits (Hardcover)
by (shelved 9 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.97 — 137 ratings — published 2012
Lud Heat & Suicide Bridge (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.84 — 127 ratings — published 1995
Underland: A Deep Time Journey (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.23 — 21,422 ratings — published 2019
Edge of the Orison: In the Traces of John Clare's 'Journey out of Essex' (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.69 — 108 ratings — published 2006
Jerusalem (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.03 — 3,324 ratings — published 2016
The Society of the Spectacle (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.03 — 23,716 ratings — published 1967
Paris Peasant (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.65 — 1,347 ratings — published 1926
High-Rise (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.62 — 40,710 ratings — published 1975
The City & the City (Hardcover)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.90 — 79,624 ratings — published 2009
From Hell (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.19 — 45,181 ratings — published 1999
The Last London: True Fictions from an Unreal City (Hardcover)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.47 — 305 ratings — published 2017
The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone (Hardcover)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.92 — 35,039 ratings — published 2016
Nightwalking: A Nocturnal History of London (Hardcover)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.70 — 342 ratings — published 2015
Walking Inside Out: Contemporary British Psychogeography (Hardcover)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.06 — 16 ratings — published 2015
A Journal of the Plague Year (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.55 — 11,950 ratings — published 1722
White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.62 — 383 ratings — published 1987
Nadja (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.53 — 13,434 ratings — published 1928
Hackney, That Rose-Red Empire: A Confidential Report (Hardcover)
by (shelved 7 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.61 — 291 ratings — published 2009
The Practice of Everyday Life (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.10 — 4,030 ratings — published 1980
Concrete Island (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.67 — 10,495 ratings — published 1974
London: City of Disappearances (Hardcover)
by (shelved 6 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.72 — 218 ratings — published 2006
Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.65 — 2,884 ratings — published 1992
To the River: A Journey Beneath the Surface (Hardcover)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.76 — 2,722 ratings — published 2011
Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country (Kindle Edition)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.93 — 1,467 ratings — published 2019
Imaginary Cities (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.73 — 403 ratings — published 2015
London Overground: A Day's Walk Around the Ginger Line (Hardcover)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.31 — 291 ratings — published 2015
London: The Biography (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.96 — 6,037 ratings — published 2000
Unruly Places: Lost Spaces, Secret Cities, and Other Inscrutable Geographies (Hardcover)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.53 — 4,158 ratings — published 2014
Edgelands: Journeys into England's True Wilderness (Hardcover)
by (shelved 5 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.89 — 504 ratings — published 2011
Weird Walk: Wanderings and Wonderings through the British Ritual Year (Hardcover)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.45 — 227 ratings — published 2023
Savage Messiah (Paperback)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.22 — 147 ratings — published 2011
The Unofficial Countryside (Hardcover)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.11 — 158 ratings — published 1973
The Man of the Crowd - an Edgar Allan Poe Short Story (Audio Cassette)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.39 — 2,561 ratings — published 1840
Holloway (Hardcover)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 4.01 — 1,159 ratings — published 2012
The Flaneur: A Stroll through the Paradoxes of Paris (Hardcover)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.72 — 2,380 ratings — published 2001
Places of the Heart: The Psychogeography of Everyday Life (Paperback)
by (shelved 4 times as psychogeography)
avg rating 3.58 — 680 ratings — published 2010
“Perhaps it’s that you can’t go back in time, but you can return to the scenes of a love, of a crime, of happiness, and of a fatal decision; the places are what remain, are what you can possess, are what is immortal. They become the tangible landscape of memory, the places that made you, and in some way you too become them. They are what you can possess and in the end what possesses you.”
― A Field Guide to Getting Lost
― A Field Guide to Getting Lost
“I mean that certain fictions, chiefly Conan Doyle, Stevenson, but many others also, laid out a template that was more powerful than any local documentary account - the presences that they created, or "figures" if you prefer it, like Rabbi Loew's Golem, became too much and too fast to be contained within the conventional limits of that fiction. They got out into the stream of time, the ether; they escaped into the labyrinth. They achieved an independent existence.
The writers were mediums; they articulated, they gave a shape to some pattern of energy that was already present. They got in on the curve of time, so that by writing, by holding off the inhibiting reflex of the rational mind, they were able to propose a text that was prophetic.”
― White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings
The writers were mediums; they articulated, they gave a shape to some pattern of energy that was already present. They got in on the curve of time, so that by writing, by holding off the inhibiting reflex of the rational mind, they were able to propose a text that was prophetic.”
― White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings












