Britain’s high places are many and varied, from the rolling hills and lush valleys of the Malverns to the vertiginous slopes
of Snowdonia, the romantic peaks and vistas of the Lake District and the silent sub-Arctic tundra of the Cairngorms. As he
explores our hills, moors and mountains, Ian Crofton is keenly aware of the echoes of those who have been there before,
from prehistory to the present day. At the same time, he is finely tuned to the miracles of the present moment while
among hills – a flash of bright moss in a bog, the swoop of an eagle above a skyline, a winter sun setting in a sea of
cloud.
Drawing on a lifetime of walking and climbing across Britain – and following an arc from the gentle Downs of southern
England to the wild peaks of Scotland’s far north –Crofton is a well-informed and companionable guide, combining
personal experiences with a keen curiosity about the history of mountain landscapes, the people who once lived, worked,
suffered and died in them, and those who have wander |