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Common Ground: Encounters with Nature at the Edges of Life Kindle Edition
That’s what Rob Cowen discovered after moving to a new home in northern England. After ten years in London he was suddenly adrift, searching for a sense of connection. He found himself drawn to a square-mile patch of waste ground at the edge of town. Scrappy, weed-filled, this heart-shaped tangle of land was the very definition of overlooked—a thoroughly in-between place that capitalism no longer had any use for, leaving nature to take its course. Wandering its meadows, woods, hedges, and fields, Cowen found it was also a magical, mysterious place, haunted and haunting, abandoned but wildly alive—and he fell in fascinated love.
Common Ground is a true account of that place and Cowen’s transformative journey through its layers and lives, but it’s much more too. As the land’s stories intertwine with events in his own life—and he learns he is to become a father for the first time—the divisions between human and nature begin to blur and shift. The place turns out to be a mirror, revealing what we are, what we’re not and how those two things are ultimately inseparable.
This is a book about discovering a new world, a forgotten world on the fringes of our daily lives, and the richness that comes from uncovering the stories and lives—animal and human—contained within. It is an unforgettable piece of nature writing, part of a brilliant tradition that stretches from Gilbert White to Robert Macfarlane and Helen Macdonald.
“I am dreaming of the edge-land again,” Cowen writes. Read Common Ground, and you, too, will be dreaming of the spaces in between, and what—including us—thrives there.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Bold and beautiful."
-- Robert Macfarlane ― New Statesman"A poetic examination of humankind's relationship with nature. . . . Recommended for the dedicated nature enthusiast and those interested in environmentalism." ― Library Journal
"Heartfelt, deep, beautiful, and moving." -- Tristan Gooley, author of The Natural Navigator
"One of the most original books in any genre."
-- Melissa Harrison ― Times, Books of the Year
"Highly poetic. . . . Common Ground is about the transformative power of this unnoticed piece of land, if one can only stand and stare for long enough." -- Serena Tarling ― Financial Times
"Touched by genius."
-- John Lewis-Stempel ― Sunday Express, Books of the Year
A Guardian readers’ Top Ten Book of the Year
― Guardian
"Blending natural history with a novelistic approach, Cowen revives his connection to the evocative, mysterious power to the natural world."
― Sunday Express"A cracking book, and having finished, I now feel deprived."
-- Alan Bennett ― London Review of Books
"Thanks to Rob Cowen’s remarkable book Common Ground, I’ve learned that there's a word for my woods: edgelands. A British nature writer, Cowen celebrates not remote slices of paradise but the wild places accessible to all of us: the unregulated land at the edges of human habitation where nature has been left to its own devices. Or, as Cowen puts it, 'the inglorious fallow patches you find at the fringes of the everyday.' . . . Cowen brings reverent attention to an edgeland near his home in the north of England. ― Christian Century
"Sensitive, thoughtful, and poetic. Rob Cowen rakes over a scrap of land with forensic care, leading us into a whole new way of looking at the world." -- Michael Palin
"An eerie, haunting book . . . rendered with hair raising, almost hallucinogenic, lyricism. . . . Cowen moves on through the seasons of the year and the creatures of the edge land, feeling, more than observing, how the improving circumstances of animal life mirror his own climb out of darkness."
― Maclean's
"Luminous. . . . A breath of fresh air."
― Irish Times
"In beautifully written and evocative prose, English nature writer Cowen explores the relationship between humans and nature, making it abundantly clear that nature is where you find it. His subject is ostensibly a single square mile of waste land on the edge of Bilton, a small town in northern England. . . . He masterfully describes this place of beauty and garbage, a place filled with wildlife and the smells and sounds of the encroaching town. But he does much more than superbly describe the transformation of the seasons over the course of a single year. In discussing the changes the land and its inhabitants have experienced over hundreds of generations, Cowen brings the lives of individuals into sharp and poignant focus. . . . He captivatingly blends science, politics, and poetry. . . . Cowen shows how to find joy and awe in the quotidian while cogitating on the world we will leave the next generation."
― Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Strange, complicated, deeply original and ultimately satisfying. . . . Swings from realism into remarkable histories, human and animal. All our relationships with nature are fed by the imaginative as well as the scientific parts of the mind and in Common Ground, Cowen has found a new way of opening out this aspect."
-- Sarah Maitland ― Countryfile, Book of the Month
"Wild and unusual. An author coming into his real story, leaping over the space between animal and human as though there were no difference between us." ― Observer
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Common Ground
Encounters with Nature at the Edges of Life
By Rob CowenThe University of Chicago Press
Copyright © 2015 Rob CowenAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-226-42426-2
Contents
Map of the Edge-land,Preface to the US Edition,
Prologue: New Year's Eve,
Crossing Point,
Ultrasound,
The Union of Opposites,
DNA,
One Day,
The Turning Time,
Metamorphoses,
Last Orders,
Revelations,
Epilogue: The Notebook,
Acknowledgements,
Notes and Selected Bibliography,
CHAPTER 1
CROSSING POINT
I am dreaming of the edge-land again. It has begun to colonise my sleeping mind. Dreams take place in the midst of Scots pines and down among the cold, scrub-scattered banks. I am following a fox, a copper coat floating through the trees. He pauses. A backward glance. Incredible eyes – coronal black holes over exploding suns, that intense face; mouth curled at its edges in the white, greasepaint smile of The Joker. Another step. Am I to follow? He pads up to the lip of a rise and disappears. Suddenly I can't move. I wake. The weak glow of a street light forms an exclamation mark on the ceiling. I dress quietly, shivering in the dark, pick up my notebook and walk out.
Modern life is such that it can be hard to see beyond the present. You think you know somewhere, but really you only know a layer, a moment. Most people don't even notice such things, but just look around you. The moss-swollen pavement crack, the rosette of a dandelion defying a driveway or a gutter-growing sow thistle, these are glimpses of what lies beneath and beyond. The deep past and the far future.
A map drawn by Ely Hargrove in 1798 in his History of the Castle, Town and Forest of Knaresborough: with Harrogate, and Its Medicinal Waters shows the town I call home as little more than two rows of cottages. Harrogate, as the world now knows it, doesn't yet exist. This hilly stack of roads, traffic lights and pristine flowerbeds, of imperialistic hotels, antique shops, churches and promenades, is still open land. Its cottage gardens, fields and marsh-meadows await delineation, diversion, draining and deed. The 'medicinal' wells that will soon lure legions of the aspiring middle classes to holiday here or, should they strike it lucky in the mills and mines, build vast villas on the woody escarpments to the south-west, are little more than mud-edged watering holes. Pigeons pick at salt accretions forming at their rims; only the informed aristocracy and gentry shoo them away to take the waters. The arches, domes and sweeping curves of Regency and Victorian architecture that will soon form the grand structures of 'the English Spa' lie dormant, locked in the gritstone cliffs and subterranean clay of the surrounding countryside.
Hindsight imbues the map with the feeling of land on the cusp. It has the death-stare of ground destined to be choked with high-density housing, tower blocks, supermarkets, shopping centres, warehouses and car dealerships. In a matter of decades the two little rows of cottages will bloom into an urban mass that consumes the surrounding land and villages. Eventually it will reach an ancient settlement a mile and a half to the north marked on Hargrove's map with a green blob – a legacy of its past life as part of a royal hunting forest. Between the 1950s and 1990s, the sprawl will swallow Bilton almost entirely, appropriating its Celtic name – farmstead of 'Bilain' – for the suburb thrown up around the scattering of old homesteads and farms. But it will be a last meal. For now at least, Harrogate will reach no further in this direction. Bilton will become edge-land. There will be no protests, no public outcries or petitions, no organised lines of conservationists standing in front of diggers or activists hauled down from centuries-old oak trees. The ground won't resist sublimation. After all, it has always been a place of transience and transformation. It has known innumerable beginnings and endings.
In contrast to the raw, jump-in-head-first shock I'd felt on the night of its discovery, my preliminary forays into this new-found land were to take more methodical lines. Confronted with this unknown world stripped bare by winter, I planned to navigate via its most obvious physical structures and landmarks in an effort to map and taxonomise it. I felt I needed to gain a sense of its definable perimeters and the logical starting point was its western edge.
In the 1840s, Britain's burgeoning railway network reached Harrogate. Or, more accurately, it reached its outskirts. A decree had been passed to prevent the town's reputation for restorative waters, clean air and new regal façades from being besmirched by steam-spewing engines and dirty tracks. Instead, it was decided that the first rail link should end a mile to the east, down a hill at a cluster of old houses named after the little stream that flowed past them. Starbeck station birthed a thriving community. Rows of terraces, pubs and hotels sprang up around the marshalling yards and engine sheds. Horse-drawn coaches more aesthetically acceptable than coal-fired trains carried the great and the good up the hill to the unsoiled spa resort. Meanwhile, financiers and speculators gripped by the frenzy of nineteenth-century Railway Mania had already turned their eyes to the land beyond, prospecting its gullies and ridges for potentially lucrative routes that would lead further north.
The intention of the hastily formed Leeds and Thirsk Railway Company was clear from its name: to connect the thrusting might of an industrialised Leeds with the outlying city of Ripon and the market towns of Thirsk and Northallerton. Starbeck soon changed from terminus to thoroughfare. Track was hammered at startling speed along a contour heading north-north-west, skirting Harrogate in a sweeping curve, colluding with natural features where possible and running over earth-stacked sidings where it wasn't. Lying on its path like a body on the tracks was Bilton.
Seated in an ornate Leeds office, no doubt with a ticking clock and glowing dog grate in the corner, a suited and bespectacled planning clerk drew a line in pencil. That was all it took. The course of the railway sliced scalpel-like through the community, straight over Bilton Lane, an old drovers' road that had already seen 400 years of foot- and hoof-fall. The bisection created an 'X' of road and rail, necessitating a level crossing. Probably no more than two white-painted wooden gates with lamps on top, it was a crossing nonetheless. X marked the spot and it still does, for today this is the edge-land's point of origin, its moment of departure from the housing estates, cul-de-sacs and crescents; it is where town becomes something else.
I'm sure such coincidences must occur frequently in the buffers between urban and rural worlds. Over time, people and landscape leave unintentional impressions on each other. Things assume significance impossible to predict or design in the moment they are conceived. Though the planning clerk is dead and the railway gone, the crossing point remains.
It was an afternoon in January and I had finished work early and returned to follow that pale seam of rubble and mud, heading north-west from where it jutted off at ninety degrees away from the divisions of tarmac, B&Q plank fencing and houses at the end of Bilton Lane. The dismantled railway line was much as I imagined it would be with rail, sleeper and shingle removed: its edges grew unchecked with bramble, dog rose and willow herb. Overshadowing it were the interwoven tangles of blackthorn, hawthorn, willow, hazel, elder and ash that become indecipherable when denuded by winter and silhouetted by a low sun. Light torched the cascades of dead grass and birds flapped between branches in shrill fly-pasts, needling the air. Everything else was still. Poised.
A long, rectangular block of masonry and concrete, green with algae, was almost entirely consumed by bare vegetation. I would find out later that this was an old raised platform constructed in the 1880s to unload the coal that supplied Harrogate's new gas works built to the west of Bilton at New Park. Its by-products, vats of ammonia and bitumen, were ferried back here and loaded onto trains heading for Middlesbrough and the shipbuilding yards of the north-east. It's an exchange commemorated in the bulbous liquorice residues that still dribble down the platform's face – great black drips hanging frozen in perpetual movement.
A few steps on and the ground gave way on either side, giving the impression of being on an elevated causeway. To my left, through the bare shrubbery, the siding became a sea wall holding back waves of housing. Tidy terracotta boxes with grey roofs rolled with the landscape's contours like a swelling ocean, its peaks and troughs awash with the debris of suburbia: wires, cars, caravans and, cresting the waves, the square tower of a church, a tree or two and a dull defiance of offices. To the north the land assumed the form of a sloping field, dipping down to a farmhouse and beck, then quickly gaining height and thickening with tawny wood. Before long both sides rose again to rejoin the old railway. The land flattened out ahead, disappearing into that curious imperceptibility of distance.
Neat staves of high-tension cables ran perpendicular overhead, east to west, carried underarm by pylons. The nearest one stamped down the brush beside the track with four barbed-wire-rimmed feet and wore a thin shawl of starlings around its shoulders. The fence of power line skirted the bulbous edge of Bilton, disappearing westward and corralling the town as it fell away downhill towards a sewage works and the old hamlet of Knox. To my left as I walked, houses petered out into a sward of common land, a grassy plateau fringed with willow wood and birch copse that accompanied the old railway onwards. A hay cropping meadow that in summer would be sewn with bird's-foot trefoil, orchids, Welsh poppies and alive with the rhythms of crickets, it was scarred with the marks of the urban: wonky white goalposts rusting in damp air, shrubs and gorse bushes fruiting the odd multicoloured membranous bag of dog shit.
Mirroring it on my right, through a thin belt of vegetation, I recognised the meadow I had stumbled back over in darkness on New Year's Eve. The trace of a path cut across its dead grass and disappeared into a dark intensity of trees running parallel to the old railway, 300 yards east. Seeing it from the opposite direction elicited a similar feeling as when I'd first come here; it was like there was something undisclosed in the grass, brush and branches, something alternative. But I didn't change course. Materialising through the mist ahead was what I'd come to find – the conclusion to this western border. Amid the blur of alder and beech was a huge metal gate prickling with railings and razor wire. The old railway plunged headlong into these reinforced shutters. Walking to the side, I craned my neck, expecting to watch the track's crumbling demise down the wooded gorge into the river. Instead, an unbroken viaduct spanned the deep, narrow valley.
In 1846, having progressed north-west half a mile from the crossing point at Bilton, the Leeds and Thirsk Railway Company faced a major obstacle. The River Nidd's meandering course rises on the mountain flanks of Great Whernside in the Yorkshire Dales, flowing on to the River Ouse near York before winding a further fifty miles east to the Humber Estuary and, eventually, the North Sea. This immovable, looping line was also proving a problem for men working a few miles east laying track for the East & West Yorkshire Junction Railway trying to connect York to Starbeck. Simultaneously, both companies began the gargantuan task of bridging the river, one at Bilton, the other at Knaresborough. Teams of men quarried enormous gritstone slabs straight from the sides of the Nidd gorge at an impressive rate. Then disaster struck. Nearing its completion in 1848, Knaresborough's viaduct dramatically collapsed, sending thousands of tonnes of stone, crenellated towers and carved abutments thundering into the water. Rebuilding took another three years. Today it is an iconic sight, ranked among the county's 'best views', immortalised in local TV news credits and preserved in the digital repositories of countless visitors. Upstream, Bilton Viaduct suffered a different fate. Opening without incident in 1847, it towered 104 feet in height with seven arches that dutifully carried freight and people over the water for well over a century. The railway's closure in 1964 heralded an unglamorous downfall. Unneeded, unnoticed, I found it shut-off, shackled and destitute, left to the plumes of dead Oxford ragwort and buddleia that bristled from its cracks.
Mostly we have no idea what surrounds us. We don't care. But to me the viaduct's scale and size seemed extraordinary, so too the sense of rectitude, the way the abandoned arches reflected nobly, silently in the river. Pines and bare larch furred the far bank; wide black water flowed beneath. An irony, I suppose, but this once great crossing point was now a definitive end, closing the western border of the edge-land with steel and wire and by virtue of its sheer height above the river. There was no plaque or information board, just words scrawled over the metal shutters and mesh: 'Kurt has Hep C' in crude, white letters. The font was difficult to age, having an almost 1970s punkish, sectarian quality, like a Belfast wall, and yet the name and disease suggested a more modern story. In the dusk-darkening trees, this combination of viaduct and graffiti felt like a worn memorial to vanished narratives, fragments of time, lost lives. Here was an arbitrary bridge between the solid and the sensory. I thought of the men who built the viaduct clambering over its sides on ropes and wooden platforms, and of the water below sliding over slabs of rock that will outlive me. I thought of Kurt, his disgruntled lover and the randomness of what is lost and what is passed on. Of time passed and time passing.
Stupid, dangerous, but I wanted to get closer.
Manoeuvring gingerly around the railings, I shimmied up and onto the top of the three-metre-high shutters, smashing my feet against them with a loud bang, balancing precariously, a leg on either side. As the drop to the river below dizzied my vision I felt a moment of vertigo but pushed through it to tip my body over, dropping heavily onto the viaduct, heart pounding. There, from that lofty position above the slow, sliding river, I could see the shape of the edge-land from the other side. The breadth and depth of the landscape, past, present and future, era stacked on top of era. There lay the northern border, the ancient serpentine Nidd, twisting east on its course through flak-like explosions of trees. Westward, where the horizon vanished, hundreds of rooks and jackdaws were swarming rookeries, rattling, squeaking and murmuring in the furthest sepia crowns, jostling for position, bickering, fluttering up and settling again. They turned the bare branches black. I thought how each must be the offspring of the victorious or the lucky, a culmination of a bloodline dating back incalculable years. Out where the river gorge slumped into fields, the white and yellow orbs of street lights demarked the western rim of Harrogate. The sewage works was an abandoned city turning and whistling to itself. Bare sycamores towered over illuminated suburban avenues, stark against the ashen sky. Closer were beeches whose forms resembled milky streams of hearth smoke rising from cottages. A light, strong and gold, burned by the river's edge in a clearing. In the descending gloom it passed for a great bonfire.
Standing there on the margin, listening to the faraway chatter of swarming corvids and watching the spectacle of night drawing a veil over the river, time and space seemed to slip and reel. All at once, I was on top of the viaduct; down by the fire and among the feathery swarm of rooks. Although it had appeared to reach its end, the long, straight track of the old railway had derailed me into a multiplicity of time, body and space. The air was thick with the sour-sweet tang of slurry, leaf-litter and pine. Then a more urgent, sweaty-smoky reek clamped over my nose and mouth, that rancid but unmistakable coming alive of irrepressible earth and animal. Fox.
Where? I wanted to see it. I wanted to glimpse the creature I shared this timeless twilight with. Keeping out of sight, I scanned the woods from my position high in the canopy, before clambering back over the shutters to search among the brambles, finding nothing. A few days later, though, it found me.
The smell was there when I returned at dusk to carry on plotting the next side of the perimeter, the edge-land's northern boundary. Turning right at the viaduct, I took a rough track leading east along the edge of the meadow's curtain of trees and down into the wood. Despite the onset of night, I followed the Nidd downstream, guided by the weak circle of a head torch, past drowned trees and along a muddy edge. The water tricked and teased, appearing still, not even a ripple giving away movement. I noticed a branch and a plastic cider bottle held in its surface overtaking me. The sudden presence of the fox was just as bewildering. Its scent, strong and sharp as cut lemons, crowded, pressed and pushed me, as though the animal was dancing between my legs, mocking my cumbersome, slithering progress. At moments I was sure it must be right behind or beside me, but each time I turned, my beam only emphasised the wood's emptiness, silvering briefly the bars of beech and oak bristling the banks.
(Continues...)Excerpted from Common Ground by Rob Cowen. Copyright © 2015 Rob Cowen. Excerpted by permission of The University of Chicago Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B01L0HWJNM
- Publisher : The University of Chicago Press (November 2, 2016)
- Publication date : November 2, 2016
- Language : English
- File size : 6.0 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 354 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,139,844 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #84 in Scotland Travel
- #1,013 in Conservation
- #1,363 in Environmentalist & Naturalist Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Rob Cowen is an award-winning writer and author. His 2012 debut Skimming Stones and Other Ways of Being in the Wild (Hodder) won the Roger Deakin Award from the Society of Authors. His second book, Common Ground (2015; RHP), has been hailed as a seminal and genre-defying work redefining writing on people and place. Common Ground was voted third in a 2018 poll to find Britain’s favourite nature book of all time, a ‘Book of the Year’ in The Times, The Express and The Independent, and ‘Top Ten Readers’ Choice’ in The Guardian. It was also shortlisted for the Wainwright, Portico and Richard Jefferies Society prizes. A nature and travel columnist at The Independent, Rob has contributed to the New York Times, The Guardian and The Telegraph and written essays and radio programmes for the BBC. His latest book 'The Heeding' (2021; E&T), is a moving, beautiful sequence of 35 poems, illustrated by Nick Hayes, that paints a picture of a year caught in the grip of history, yet filled with revelatory perspectives close at hand: a sparrowhawk hunting in a back street; the moon over a town with a loved-one's hand held tight; butterflies massing in a high-summer yard - the everyday wonders and memories that shape a life and help us recall our own. Already hailed as a 'masterpiece', The Heeding is a meditation on, and memorial to, a changing world. Rob lives in North Yorkshire in the UK.
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2019I really love this book. It took me away from the hustle and bustle of city life and into nature to enjoy all of it's beauty and peace.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2016This is a beautifully written reflection on a life in nature and in the real world, about the overlap of society and nature.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2016It`s different..I have not finished it yet...but he does go on a bit about that fox......and I am expecting him to go on those midnight journeys in the daytime before I get to the end.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2017A respite for the weary soul
Top reviews from other countries
- alnemanReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 30, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars My favourite book from this year, intriguing insight and fascination with the landscape & nature of a local urban fringe patch
Rob Cowen moves house to the edge of Harrogate, and gets to know his local area of greenspace in the urban fringe intimately through time. He starts off defining the boundary of his new local patch, then each new chapter takes on a different character, from an ageing fox struggling to survive a harsh winter; then through the eyes of an owl; followed by a hare, then a deer. The patch of land is not large, nor is it a formal nature reserve, just a rather a scruffy scrap of land that has been neglected and overlooked, that provides a refuge for local nature to flourish in proximity to man .
The descriptive writing of the landscape ,weather, and his grasp of the unique local feel and relationship with his special local place is beautifully done, memorable descriptions that stick in the mind , and are at times highly poetic . He writes so well from a highly vivid and unique perspective. at times he antropromorphises, by getting into the mindset of a veteran fox in its last dying days, at other times he is more analytical and observational, morphing between the two states of mind in an intriguing way, very well done, making it feel real and believable.
This book combines appreciation and a highly perceptive insight blending the interests of landscape, wildlife, history and local human activity in an unusual distinctive way, that is at times emotional feeling highly personal, and is thought provoking and gets the reader on board with his thinking . Well researched, and exploring some controversial issues, like the link of badgers with the spread of TB It also combines with his own changing domestic situation, from moving into a new home and doing it up, his relationship with his expectant partner, through to the birth of his first child. going from these highly personal private issues, to the wider political and environmental agenda of our times is adeptly and cleverly done.
This is probably my favourite book of this year, it certainly stands out from the crowds, gives a sense of wonder with local nature and landscape on the doorstep. It wonderfully interweaves many different threads into a splendid fascinating book that draws you into his world, incredibly well done, an outstanding achievement that sticks in the mind.
- WestyReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 26, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended - warm, human, wild and lyrical.
Nature writing, fiction, local history, polemic or memoir? It’s hard to say into which genre this book fits best - and that seems to be the point.
Rob Cowen’s second book dances with of all the above styles, while exploring a fragment of waste ground at the edge of Harrogate. Rob suddenly finds himself unemployed in a new town, and learns he is soon to become a father. This year of personal change is seen through the lens of Rob’s frequent visits to a wedge of the kind of terrain most of us ignore. Using a lyrical, personal style, he forensically investigates its current inhabitants (plant, animal, insect and human) looks into its past, and worries about its future.
This patch of ground is fairly small - I’ve been through it myself - and one might wonder how much there can be to say about a scrubby triangle of weeds and litter. And that problem is what allows the book to sing. In the winter, Rob encounters a fox, and in an imaginative leap, the reader is in the mind of the animal, chasing through the undergrowth, starving in old age and fleeing rivals. This is a breathless passage, and it hits you in the face like cold water. It’s a trick he repeats with, among others, a deer, a homeless man and - most surprisingly - a local shop assistant imagined as a mayfly.
I’m not a huge reader of nature writing, so I don’t know how frequent this kind of thing is in the field, but it works very well. Common Ground doesn’t just examine one man’s relationship with nature, but shows how nature can be a kind of hub, linking us to the minds and feelings of everything else that passes through this innocuous bit of ground. The edge land is a liminal space where our experiences can seep into someone or something else’s - simply through the act of stopping and having a bit of a think.
Rob’s previous book, Skimming Stones, co-authored with Leo Critchley, explored this theme. That book was about how certain actions can be used to engage better with the world. Common Ground boils that down even further - the only action needed in the wild is empathetic imagining.
I’ve read some reviews which criticise the scope this book, saying that it’s not purely about nature, and that the language used is too convoluted. Yes, some of the metaphors do get awfully complex. However, this is a book about finding the magical in the everyday - and that subject deserves elevated language. As for the scope - why should nature writing only be about nature? If we can’t connect the natural world with the human, what impetus do we have to enjoy and protect it?
This is a book of human sadness, warmth and joy. It’s not quite one thing or another - much like the edge land it describes. Does that make it a new thing entirely? Or, like the edge land itself, is it something that’s been there for a long time, ignored, but of tremendous worth?
- C. S. BancroftReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 2, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Common in parts
There are three sides to this book:
1) the exploration of edge lands and how they are places of wonder, exploration and enlightenment. All of our towns have these places, whether they are a clogged up brook or a clutch of forgotten trees. We should explore these places and look at Nature through their lens.
2) a memoir about the life of the author and the approaching birth of his child. He interweaves his narrative to fit the processes of the edge land to his own life, something we can all do and relate to.
3) a fictional account of the world through the eyes of various characters (both people and animal) These are the imaginings of how other beings see the world and how they interact with it.
For me, I enjoyed parts 1 & 2 of the book. It was filled with detail (some of the comments have attacked the book for being too 'repetitive' regarding the landscape - hello, have you been outside?) it was an interesting part memoir, part natural observation which meshed well.
What let the book down for me was the fictional stories of the fox and other characters. I knew that it was all made up so I didn't really care about it. I don't really 'get' what the purpose of these sections are about, apart from padding out pages in the book. All in all, a good read.
- OxymoronTequilaReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 4, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars A highly original fusion of literary styles and narrative drives.
Rob and I wrote Skimming Stones together back in 2012, drawing on a shared love of nature and the broader connections it revealed to us. We aimed to create something accessible and rewarding, and were gratified by the positive response we got.
In Common Ground, Rob takes this drive to another level, and intermingles additional forces: the personal narrative of a writer, husband and father, and a unique visionary narrative that bursts from his imagination. The result is a powerful alchemy: a book which goes beyond its title and stakes out new ground.
The book is an artfully blended vision of nature alongside modernity. Winter “fiddles with colour filters, dragging down tones, desaturating” like a self-conscious Instagrammer. A “rook taking flight turns out to be a shredded black bin bag caught in [a] pylon’s struts” and a blackbird’s screech of distress is literally “a faulty ignition”. Nature is ever-present in the book, but the language makes the connection to it slippery at times, and beautifully conveys why that connection is so valuable, giving us as it does a different context for our experiences.
Animals are sometimes anthropomorphised and sometimes unknowably inhuman. There is nothing twee and comfortable about a world where a fox’s face is “coronal black holes over exploding suns…mouth curled at the edges in the white greasepaint smile of the Joker”.
Common Ground is cyclical as well as progressive, a spiralling rendering of the scrap of ‘edge land’ it describes. Rob’s intense concern with the physical and the specific leads to a kind of repetition, but this is not monotone. He expertly shapes the recurrent details into a beat, underpinning verses, crescendos, and refrains. It’s a virtuoso performance from a great writer.
Reading this book will give you unique sense of the land he describes, but also a fresh new view of the world around you, and you’ll encounter some strikingly original and entertaining characters along the way.
- Lesley McReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 25, 2019
3.0 out of 5 stars Overly dramatic
I bought this on the recommendation of someone on a nature forum; however, I'm finding it really heavy going what with every sentence containing at least one superlative metaphor or simile - makes me feel as if the poor author is suffering from some terrifying psychedelic drug habit that is turning his whole environment into some Arthur Rackham fairytale horror fantasy. I'm wondering if there's a point to the story so am ploughing on through...