The frayed Atlantic edge : a historian's journey from Shetland to the Channel

by David Gange

Hardcover, 2019

Status

Available

Call number

0.gange

Publication

London : William Collins, 2019.

User reviews

LibraryThing member antao
The book is at its best when recounting snippets of history often unearthed from his conversations with islanders and coastal dwellers. The passages in which he presents the literature of the area (forming a group of Atlanticists as he calls them, Atlantic thinkers, east side at least..), and
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quotes from them, are less interesting - and it's a fine line to tread between the two. Some areas come off less well than others. Cornwall, for example, is an almost non-stop rehash of its poets, which is fine, but outside the remit, at least as far as I am concerned, or at least, what he does less well.

I suspect that simply, after such an epic journey, he has more affection for places he writes his own experiences as opposed to relying on others. Bardsey above Cornwall for example, Havera above Mull. Skellig Michael above Land’s End.

The blend, like a Scotch whisky, works really well when he gets it right.. for example, quoting from Charles Edwardes ‘The Island In The Currents’ of Enlli, off the Llyn peninsula (Bardsey):

“A slow old man, with much grizzled hair to his head and chin, and the signs of recent breakfast about his mouth, came towards us with a scythe. ‘I am the king,’ he said quietly...and then with a differential little bow, he went to cut grass.”

He recounts his interviews with islanders.. the ‘modern sceptic’ he begins, surely doubts the story that 20,000 saints are buried here, but the experience of those who work ‘this preposterous charnel pit’ belies incredulous assumptions:

“It is all bones underneath, nothing but bones. I have seen them myself, indeed. Thee were women with hair eighteen inches long, and child’s, and man’s, in such heaps as you could not believe. And their teeth, oh indeed, I never did see such full mouths of them.”

But overall it’s an inspirational book. There are some wonderfully written passages and many fascinating anecdotes. And I am inspired myself, albeit not by kayak, but with the mountain bike, running shoes, dog, tent and van to go to retrace the journey (by land) and investigate some of these places.
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Awards

James Cropper Wainwright Prize (Shortlist — 2020)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

xii, 388 p.; 24 inches

ISBN

9780008225117
Page: 0.5679 seconds