Selected Product: | The Making of the British Landscape: How We Have Transformed the Land, from Prehistory to Today Hardcover Author: Francis Pryor Publisher: Allen Lane Release Date: June 2010 ISBN-10: 1846142059 ISBN-13: 9781846142055 List Price: £30.00 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Making of the British Landscape: How We Have Transformed the Land, from Prehistory to Today by Francis Pryor (ISBN-10: 1846142059, ISBN-13: 9781846142055). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Making of the British Landscape: How We Have Transformed the Land, from Prehistory to Today by Francis Pryor (ISBN-10: 1846142059, ISBN-13: 9781846142055). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com satisfaction Francis Pryor's books are always a pleasure to read and then enjoy again and again. The Making of the British Landscape is hugely informative and wise and he clearly has a passion for the history of Britain. one of those books that you know will be on the bookshelf and referred to again and again Really very good - but not perfect To write a single volume history of the British countryside, from pre-history to the present day, is an ambitious task, some would say an over ambitious task. Francis Pryor, who is probably best known for his books on prehistory and his appearances on Time Team, approaches this book with clear passion.
Pryor has organised the book chronologically, an historians approach, rather than on a regional or "habitat" basis. So, while the book is well supplied with sub-headings, if you wish to follow the fortunes of (for example) woodlands you need to read most of the book. Equally, reading the history of the Midlands or West Country may require frequent trips to Scotland and Northumbria.
The book itself has a number of central ideas - that things happened sooner than popular myth would have us believe, that revolutions are rare, that much change was important symbolically as well as economically or socially and that we need to pay close attention to the actual evidence to be able to "read" the country side.
The roots of the British countryside are very old, reaching back into the early Stone Age, and it is in these sections of the book that Pryor is in his element. As the book moves into more modern times and especially in the sections on post-war Britain the book begins to run out of steam. At one point the author admits that he will not attempt to summarize the development of town and country planning for fear of ridicule. While this is a sensible idea, it does show that the finer nuances of cause and effect in the modern countryside are not his real area of expertise. However, I do not think that the final sections are poor; they just lack the sparkle of the earlier chapters. Some of the pictures are a little too small to show much detail, and it would help if illustration intended for comparison were one facing pages - but these really are minor issue of layout rather than content.
What I do find difficult is that I was able to find mistakes in the book - not typos or the rather frustrating tendency to repeat definitions that have already been made, but errors of fact. The scree run below the Langdale Pikes axe factory site is identified as a waterfall, and the Stadium of Light, Sunderland FC's new home ground is apparently in Middlesbrough. Errors of omission are understandable, even in a book that already runs to 800 pages, but factual errors are another thing entirely. (While you may say that two mistakes is not a bad effort for a book of this size, most of the book contained details about landscapes and regions I have never been in - where I knew the landscape, I found mistakes - and please don't point out my typos - I'm not a professional).
The final section of the book is really a plea for a greater level of connection between people and their landscape - an idea which should clearly be applauded.
To conclude I will return to the first paragraph of my review. This is an ambitious book with a few issues (all of which could be sorted out in a second edition). As a starting point for study of the British landscape it really is very, very good - but you just may want to check on a few of the details!
Recommended.
A book that opens all sorts of possibilities Doctor Pryor is probably best known for his books on archaeology and his latest one attempts to bring a lot of such knowedge up to date. Indeed this is an admitted "update" on Hoskins' classic "Making of the English Landscape" and so includes much information on Wales and Scotland. Having said that though the vast bulk of the examples used are still English, perhaps because that is where the best examples of man's effect on the landscape exist.
As I say the book is bang up to date including discourses on such disparate subjects as modern planning law, erosion and climate change, all of which obviously have a bearing on where the landscape is changing now and likely to in the future.
All in all if you are at all interested in how the British landscape got to be how it is and how it may change this is a book you will enjoy. It is an "easy" read, which is a compliment as the author's obvious knowledge is worn lightly. There are loads of illustrations and maps, some of which might have benefitted from being larger and more detailed it has to be said, but one of the encouragements is to look at the OS maps of whichever area you are interested in and use this book as a guide to how the map looks as it does. This last point is important as the author makes no claims that this is a definitive guide and indeed offers two pages of more detailed "books to take in the car", but as a primer on the subject this book takes some beating.
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