This looks rather good, but I really can't buy any more books for a while...
Stories in all landscapes begin below the surface of the earth. Bedrock speaks first through the variety of soils, plants and animals that live above ground, then shapes the way people farm land, worship their gods and build villages, towns and cities.
To understand the distinct quality of any place, first we must peel back the skin of the earth.
Adapted from the acclaimed BBC Radio 3 series, Cornerstones invites writers from around the world to consider the ground beneath their feet. Distinguished by a strong sense of place and characterised by close, personal observation, the pieces in this collection take us away from the familiar surfaces of life and express the awe that we feel when encountering the invisible heft, grain and rub of the subterranean world.
From Lewisian gneiss, granite, flint, millstone grit, Red Sandstone, quartz, meteorites, into caves and through the streets of the ‘Granite City’, across Siberia, the Jurassic Coast, Samiland and the Weald, Cornerstones is an extraordinary journey through hidden landscapes, both familiar and wild, rural and urban.
The Radio 3 series is part of the ESSAYS strand, and some of the programmes are still available to listen to on iPlayer.
Here's the result of a SEARCH on the title.
For example, here's Alan Garner on FLINT
And here's Sara Wheeler on her first visit to the Canadian Arctic.
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