The Last Wilderness
Neil Ansell
£12.99
Mr B's review
This book reminds you to not count, not rush, not worry about what the world thinks about you.
Inspired by a short adventure during his youth to the west coast of Scotland, Neil felt compelled to revisit ‘The Rough Bounds’ of the Highlands in recent years: to walk, camp and explore in solitude.
Despite the pain and fear of a developing heart condition, his fading hearing, falls and unwelcoming terrain, Neil appreciates the natural beauty into which he almost fatalistically throws himself. To read about his experiences gave me the same vivid rush that comes from engaging with a wild landscape when I don’t have my head buried in a book.
During Neil’s travels to this area, he reflects on the landscape’s history, the act of hiking, his own health, the wildlife, his years of global travel and what freedom there is in being alone with the natural world. – Katrina
Description
Neil Ansell’s THE LAST WILDERNESS is a mesmerising book on nature and solitude by a writer who has spent his lifetime taking solitary ventures into the wild. For any readers of the author’s previous book, DEEP COUNTRY, Robert Macfarlane’s THE OLD WAYS or William Atkins THE MOOR.
Shortlisted for the 2018 Wainwright Golden Beer Book Prize
Shortlisted for the 2018 Highland Book Prize
‘Ansell has the rare skill of combining vividly the intimacy of detail and the astonishing grandeur of this North West coastline of Scotland. Through his keen eyes we look again at the familiar with a sense of wondrous revelation’ Madeleine Bunting
‘Beautiful…a testimony to reticent courage’ Daily Mail
The experience of being in nature alone is here set within the context of a series of walks that Neil Ansell takes into the most remote parts of Britain, the rough bounds in the Scottish Highlands. He illustrates the impact of being alone as part of nature, rather than outside it.
As a counterpoint, Neil Ansell also writes of the changes in the landscape, and how his hearing loss affects his relationship with nature as the calls of the birds he knows so well become silent to him.
Publisher Review
[A] haunting, lyrical memoir * Simple Things * He captures the landscape and the sense of adventure exquisitely: enough to make me feel I’ve been there but leaving me longing to make a trek of my own * The Pool * A hauntingly beautiful memoir on nature, solitude and hearing loss * Waterstones Website, Best books to look out for * The Last Wilderness is a beautiful read; rich in descriptive detail… his passion for the environment and his sublime prose make it a book to be savoured. * CultureFly * [A] captivating memoir…vivid as photographs, yet sketched with something more profound than simple reportage. Beneath the measured, knowledgeable, unfussy voice is a meaningful, and even important record: not just of a changing landscape, but of a man such places have shaped. — The Herald Beautiful…a testimony to reticent courage * Daily Mail * A love letter to Scotland . . . how I wish I could go back to Arisaig and the Small Isles. How much I missed, but how glad I am to experience it now with this wonderful writer * My Weekly * Lyrical, thought-provoking * Scotsman * Beautifully charts the challenges and solaces of being alone and part of nature * Bookseller * A beautifully-written account of the author’s journeys to some of the most remote parts of Britain in search of solitude and solace * Choice * Neil Ansell is a genuine creature of the wild. His knowledge of remote places, and his love for them, come from deep and sustained immersion. He writes in prose which is entirely right for its subject – unshowy, level-headed, quietly surprising. The Last Wilderness is a wonderful experience which tingles with all the sensations of being out on the hill, in all weathers, alone — Philip Marsden The Last Wilderness is a moving and mesmerising book. Ansell’s quiet, respectful immersion in the landscape rewards with some startling encounters with the natural world. He is a knowledgeable and generous guide to the unique flora and fauna of this beautiful corner of Scotland — James Macdonald Lockhart, author of RAPTOR Ansell has the rare skill of combining vividly the intimacy of detail and the astonishing grandeur of this North West coastline of Scotland. Through his keen eyes we look again at the familiar with a sense of wondrous revelation — Madeleine Bunting Ansell’s beautiful memoir of his walks through the Scottish wilderness makes the case for being truly a part of nature rather than outside of it * Observer *
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