The second instalment to the hugely successful Costa prize shortlister, The Salt Path, and the continued, powerful true story of the couple who lost everything
Raynor Winn is the multi-million copy bestselling author of The Salt Path, The Wild Silence and Landlines. The Salt Path won the inaugural RSL Christopher Bland Prize and was shortlisted for the 2018 Costa Biography Award and the Wainwright Golden Beer Book Prize. The Wild Silence was shortlisted for the 2021 Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing and her most recent book, Landlines, was a no.1 Sunday TImes Bestseller. She is a regular long-distance walker and writes about nature, homelessness and our relationship to the land. She lives in Cornwall with her husband Moth.
Heartening and comforting . . . The nature writing is beautiful and
it is a thrill to read. You feel the world is a better place
because Raynor and Moth are in it
*The Times*
Raynor Winn has written a brilliant, powerful and touching account
of her life before and after The Salt Path, which, like her
astonishing debut, will connect with anyone who has triumphed over
adversity
*Stephen Moss, author and naturalist*
A beautiful, luminous and magical piece of writing
*Rachel Joyce, author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry*
Written in wise, unflinching, exquisite prose, this is a different
kind of journey - into the past, into grief and also into Winn's
search for connection. A spiritual journey instead of a physical
one, and, for me at least, an even richer one
*Rachel Joyce, author of Miss Benson's Beetle*
Deeply personal and spiritual in its exploration of the healing
qualities of nature . . . Winn's writing transforms her
surroundings and her spirits, her joy coming across clearly in her
shimmering prose
*i*
In this unflinching sequel to The Salt Path, nature provides solace
against forebodings of mortality . . . there is a luminous
conviction to the prose
*Observer*
To follow Raynor Winn on her songline back to Cornwall is to know
how it feels to walk yourself into the land you love and find peace
at the end of the journey
*Brian Jackman, travel journalist for The Sunday Times*
An uplifting, illuminating read
*Daily Mirror*
Winn's soul-baring honesty and beautifully remembered, touching
conversations will take your breath away
*BBC Countryfile*
Notions of home are poignantly explored . . . Her evocations of
weather, landscape, the sea and her love for her partner, Moth, who
has an incurable neurodegenerative condition, are wonderful
*Guardian*
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