From one of our greatest science writers, this biography of a beech-&-bluebell wood through diverse moods & changing seasons combines stunning natural history with the ancient history of the countryside to tell the full story of the British landscape.` The woods are the great beauty of this country... A fine forest-like beech wood far more beautiful than anything else which we have seen in its vicinity` is how John Stuart Mill described a small patch of beech-and bluebell woodl&, buried deeply in the Chiltern Hills & now owned by Richard Fortey. Drawing upon a lifetime of scientific expertise & abiding love of nature, Fortey uses his small wood to tell a wider story of the ever-changing British landscape, human influence on the countryside over many centuries & the vital interactions between flora, fauna & fungi. The trees provide a majestic stage for woodland animals & plants to reveal their own stories. Fortey presents his wood as an interwoven collection of different habitats rich in species. His attention ranges from the beech & cherry trees that dominate the wood to the flints underfoot; the red kites & woodpeckers that soar overhead; the lichens, mosses & liverworts decorating the branches as well as the myriad species of spiders, moths, beetles & crane-flies. The 300 species of fungi identified in the wood capture his attention as much as familiar deer, shrews & dormice. Fortey is a naturalist who believes that all organisms are as interesting as human beings
- & certainly more important than the observer. So this book is a close examination of nature & human history. He proves that poetic writing is compatible with scientific precision. The book is filled with details of living animals & plants, charting the passage of the seasons, visits by fellow enthusiasts; the play of light between branches; the influence of geology; & how woodland influences history, architecture & industry. On every page he shows how an intimate study of one small wood can reveal so much about the natural world & demonstrates his relish for the incomparable pleasures of discovery.