<p>‘An evocative and essential guide to disappeared places and difficult futures.’ <strong>Will Wiles, author of <em>Plume</em> </strong></p>
<p> </p>
<p>‘A rich, haunting account of lost lands and vanished futures.' <strong>Professor David Farrier, author of <em>Footprints: In Search of Future Fossils</em> </strong></p>
<p> </p>
<p>‘A beguiling exploration of lost worlds beneath the sea’ <strong>Merlin Coverley, author of <em>The Art of Wandering</em>  </strong></p>
<p> <strong> </strong></p>
<p>‘A reassuring perspective on the Anthropocene: the ebb and flow of civilisations, the inevitability of change and our capacity for renewal. Thoughtful and necessary writing.’ <strong>Sonia Overall, author of <em>Heavy Time</em></strong><strong> </strong></p>
<p>‘</p>
<p><em>Sunken Lands</em> is a wonderfully immersive exploration of our fascination with all things antediluvian. Gareth Rees dives deep to give us stories of watery landscapes as varied as the once wildlife-rich Lincolnshire Fens, hurricane-haunted New Orleans and the inundated relics of a drowned Roman resort beneath the Bay of Naples.’ <strong>Edward Parnell, author of <em>Ghostland</em> </strong>  </p>
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</p>
<p>‘Given the stark warnings contained within, it is admirable that this book is such a joy to read. Its opening precis of fluctuating seas mixes scientific poise with the relish of storytelling … A musician as well as an author, Mr Rees always writes with imagination and lightly worn songfulness.’<strong> <em>Country Life</em></strong></p>
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</p>
<p>‘From a fabled drowned kingdom in Wales to echoes of Noah's ark in the Mahabharata, warnings of hubris in abusing nature resonate in Gareth E. Rees's world tour of flood myths’<strong> New Scientist Online</strong></p>

‘A fascinating if stark warning about human hubris in ignoring our place in nature’ New Scientist



Travel through drowned forests, vanished villages and sinking cities: the lost lands of our past, present – and future.

 

‘A rich, haunting account of lost lands and vanished futures.' Professor David Farrier, author of Footprints: In Search of Future Fossils 

 

From Stone Age lands that slipped beneath the English Channel to the rapid inundation of New Orleans, Gareth E. Rees explores stories of flooded places from the past – and those disappearing before our eyes.

 

The places lost to the eternally shifting boundaries between water and land continue to have a powerful emotional resonance today. Their uncertain features emerge to haunt us, briefly, when the moon draws back the tide to reveal a spire or a tree stump. And, imbued with myths and warnings from the past, these underwater worlds can also teach us important lessons about the unavoidability of change, the ebb and flow of Earth’s natural cycles, and the folly of trying to control them.

 

Sunken Lands peels back the layers of silt, sea and mythology to reveal what our submerged past can tell us about our imminent future as rising sea levels transform our planet once more.

 

Praise for Sunken Lands

 

‘An evocative and essential guide to disappeared places and difficult futures.’ Will Wiles, author of Plume 


‘A beguiling exploration of lost worlds beneath the sea’ Merlin Coverley, author of The Art of Wandering  

 

‘A reassuring perspective on the Anthropocene: the ebb and flow of civilisations, the inevitability of change and our capacity for renewal. Thoughtful and necessary writing.’ Sonia Overall, author of Heavy Time 

Les mer

An immersive travelogue exploring the pervasive mythology and emotional resonance of flooded places, at a time when the waters are rising once more

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781783967698
Publisert
2024-03-21
Utgiver
Elliott & Thompson Limited
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Gareth E. Rees is the author of Unofficial Britain, longlisted for the Ondaatje Prize and one of the Sunday Times best books of the year 2020. He's also the author of Car Park Life, The Stone Tide and Marshland. His first short story collection, Terminal Zones, was published in 2022 and examines the strangeness of everyday life in a time of climate change. He lives in Hastings with his wife and children.