The Wood: The Life & Times of Cockshutt Wood

· Transworld Digital · Narrated by Leighton Pugh
5.0
2 reviews
Audiobook
6 hr 32 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

Random House presents the audiobook edition of The Wood by John Lewis-Stempel, read by Leighton Pugh.

From 'one of the best nature-writers of his generation' (Country Life) and 2017 winner of the Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing, this BBC Radio 4 'Book of the Week' is the story of a wood - both its natural daily life and its historical times. Cockshutt is a particular wood - three and half acres of mixed woodland in south west Herefordshire - but it stands as exemplar for all the small woods of England.

For four years John Lewis-Stempel managed the wood. He coppiced the trees and raised cows and pigs who roamed free there. This is the diary of the last year, by which time he had come to know it from the bottom of its beech roots to the tip of its oaks, and to know all the animals that lived there - the fox, the pheasants, the wood mice, the tawny owl - and where the best bluebells grew. For many fauna and flora, woods like Cockshutt are the last refuge. It proves a sanctuary for John too.

To read The Wood is to be amongst its trees as the seasons change, following an easy path until, suddenly the view is broken by a screen of leaves, or your foot catches on a root, or a bird startles overhead. Lyrical, informative, steeped in poetry and folklore, it is both very real and very magical.

‘John Lewis-Stempel is the hottest nature writer around.’ – Spectator

‘It sounds magical and you just know it will be gloriously written.’ – Bookseller

Ratings and reviews

5.0
2 reviews
Christopher King
April 8, 2020
This was my first Stemple book, although I'd seen his books around I they had been lost in the white-noise wave of nature books that flooded bookshops after the success of MacFarlane's 'Landmarks'. I now live near a wood much like the one described so wonderfully in this work and decided to get it on audiobook to listen to while I work in my studio. Its simply beautiful, and I enjoyed it so much I found I had to ration it for fear of it ending too soon. The reading of the audiobook is a little too dramatic for the text, the voice artist making the author sound much older and more theatrical than the text would suggest. Also for sone reason his mispronunciation of 'fly agaric' grates somewhat. These are petty criticisms for what was a very enjoyable book that Im planning on getting in paperback to enjoy again.
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About the author

John Lewis-Stempel is a farmer and 'Britain's finest living nature writer' (The Times). His books include the Sunday Times bestsellers Woodston, The Running Hare and The Wood. He is the only person to have won the Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing twice, with Meadowland and Where Poppies Blow. In 2016 he was named Magazine Columnist of the Year for his column in Country Life. He farms cattle, sheep, pigs and poultry. Traditionally.

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Narrated by Leighton Pugh