Mudlarking

Maiklem, Lara

£10.99

For thousands of years human beings have been losing their possessions and dumping their rubbish in the River Thames, making it the longest and most varied archaeological site in the world. For those in the know, the muddy stretches provide a tangible link with the past, a connection to the natural world, and an oasis of calm in a chaotic city. Lara Maiklem left the countryside for London in her twenties. At first enticed by the city, she soon found herself cut adrift, yearning for the solace she had known growing up among nature. Down on the banks of the River Thames, she discovered mudlarking: the act of scavenging in the mud for items discarded by past generations of Londoners. Moving from the river’s tidal origins in the west of the city to the point where it reaches the sea in the east, ‘Mudlarking’ is the story of the Thames and its people as seen through these objects.

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Publish Date: 05/03/2020

Description

_______________WINNER OF THE INDIE BOOK AWARD FOR NON-FICTIONTHE TOP 2 SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLERA BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEKAN OBSERVER BOOK OF THE YEAR_______________Mudlark (/’mAdla;k/) noun A person who scavenges for usable debris in the mud of a river or harbourLara Maiklem has scoured the banks of the Thames for over fifteen years, in pursuit of the objects that the river unearths: from Neolithic flints to Roman hair pins, medieval buckles to Tudor buttons, Georgian clay pipes to Victorian toys. These objects tell her about London and its lost ways of life.Moving from the river’s tidal origins in the west of the city to the point where it meets the sea in the east, Mudlarking is a search for urban solitude and history on the River Thames, which Lara calls the longest archaeological site in England.As she has discovered, it is often the tiniest objects that tell the greatest stories._______________‘Enchanting’ Sunday Times‘Driven by curiosity, freighted with mystery and tempered by chance, wonders gleam from every page’ – Melissa Harrison‘Brilliant. No one has looked at these odd corners since Sherlock Holmes’ Sunday Telegraph‘The very best books that deal with the past are love letters to their subject, and the very best of those are about subjects that love their authors in return. Such books are very rare, but this is one’ – Ian Mortimer‘Fascinating. There is nothing that Maiklem does not know about the history of the river or the thingyness of things’ Guardian‘A treasure. One of the best books I’ve read in years’ – Tracy Borman

Additional information

Weight 249 g
Dimensions 198 × 129 × 21 mm
Author

Publisher
Imprint

Cover

Paperback

Pages

316 , 8 unnumbered of plates

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

942.2 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K