Hollow Places
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citită de Nicholas Camm
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Despre Hollow Places carte
‘Impossible to summarise and delightfully absorbing, Hadley’s book is comfortably the most unexpected history book of the year’Sunday Times
A luminous journey through a thousand years of folklore and English history.
Hollow Places begins with a Hertfordshire dragon-slayer named Piers Shonks but soon draws us into the company of outlaws and stonemasons, antiquaries and champions. Full of wonder and always surprising, the story takes us to the margins of the Bayeux Tapestry where strange creatures gather, to ancient woodland where hollow trees hide secrets, and to the scribbled clues about folk heroes in eighteenth-century manuscripts. Hadley leads us back shivering to a church in Georgian England to sketch the dragon on a tomb, to stand atop its tower triangulating the Elizabethan countryside, and to confront the zealous Mr Dowsing and his thugs looting brasses and smashing masonry during the Civil War. Along the way, we discover how long bones will last in a crypt and where medieval stonemasons found inspiration.
The story of Piers Shonks is the survivor of an 800-year battle between storytellers and those who would mock or silence them. It stands for all those thousands of seemingly forgotten tales that used to belong to every village. It is an adventure into the past by a talented and original new writer, and a meditation on memory and belief that underlines the importance and the power of the folk legends we used to tell and why they still matter.
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Christopher Hadley
Christopher Hadley writes at the murky, wonderful intersection of history and folklore – producing immersive history books which meld time-travel, actual foot stepping and meticulous research. His first book was Hollow Places, an account of his search across one thousand years of British history for the dragon-slayer Shonks. His second book The Road is a quest and love letter to Roman roads. Both books have received ecstatic praise from reviewers with Dominic Sandbrook choosing Hollow Places as his book of the year and Gerard de Groot writing in The Times about The Road: "…the breadth of his knowledge …the beauty of his prose. The Road deserves to be read at least twice, first to appreciate what it reveals and then to luxuriate in its effervescent voice. On nearly every page a random passage takes one’s breath away".
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Nicholas Camm
