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Robert Macfarlane (writer)

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For the New Zealand politician see Robert Macfarlane (New Zealand)

Robert Macfarlane, (born Halam, Nottinghamshire[1] 15 August 1976), is a British travel writer and literary critic. Educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge and Magdalen College, Oxford, he is currently a Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and teaches in the Faculty of English at Cambridge.[2]

Books

Macfarlane's first book, Mountains of the Mind, was published in 2003 and won the Guardian First Book Award, the Somerset Maugham Award, and the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. It was shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. It is an account of the development of Western attitudes to mountains and precipitous landscapes, and takes its title from a line by the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins. Macfarlane's book combines history with first-person narrative. He considers why people are drawn to mountains despite their obvious dangers, and examines the powerful and sometimes fatal hold that mountains can come to have over the imagination. The book owes an undisguised debt to the writings of Simon Schama and Francis Spufford, and its heroes include the mountaineer George Mallory.[3]

Macfarlane's second book was Original Copy: Plagiarism and Originality in Nineteenth-Century Literature, which was published in March 2007. Exploring the difference between creation and invention, the book surveys the "borrowedness" of much Victorian literature, focusing on the writings of George Eliot, Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde, among others.[4]

His third book The Wild Places was published in September 2007. In it he embarks on a series of journeys in search of the wildness that remains in Britain and Ireland [5]. The book explores wildness both geographically and intellectually, testing different ideas of the wild against different landscapes, and describes Macfarlane's explorations of forests, moors, salt marshes, mudflats, islands, sea-caves and city fringes. A condensed version of the book was broadcast as Book of the Week on BBC Radio 4 in September 2007.[6] In November 2007, the book won the Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature, and in June 2008 it won the Scottish Arts Council Non-Fiction Book Of The Year Award. In November 2008, it was joint winner of the Grand Prize at the Banff Mountain Festival, North America's equivalent of the Boardman Tasker Prize.[7] It became a hardback bestseller, and was shortlisted for the Dolman Best Travel Book Award, the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award, the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, the Independent Booksellers' Award, and the British Book Awards Non-Fiction Book Of The Year Award.

Overview

Macfarlane is seen as the inheritor of a tradition of nature writing which includes John Muir, Richard Jefferies and William Cobbett, as well as contemporary figures such as John McPhee, Barry Lopez and Roger Deakin. He is generally grouped with a number of recent British writers who haave provoked a new critical and popular interest in writing about landscape.[8].

Macfarlane's interests in topography, ecology and the environment have been transmitted through his books but also through newspaper and magazine essays, notably his Common Ground series which was published in The Guardian in 2005.[9] He has also published reportage and travel essays in magazines including Granta (issues 90, 101, 102) and Archipelago (issues 1 and 3).

In 2004 Macfarlane sat on the panel of judges for the Man Booker Prize, which selected Alan Hollinghurst's The Line of Beauty as that year's winner, and in 2005 he guest-edited and introduced The Mays anthology of new writing.

Bibliography

Books

  • Mountains of the Mind: A History of a Fascination. London and New York: Granta Books and Pantheon Books. 2003. ISBN 0375421807.
  • The Wild Places. London and New York: Granta Books and Penguin Books. 2007. ISBN 9780143113935.

Books Introduced by Macfarlane

  • Graham Greene, A Gun For Sale (London: Vintage, 2005)
  • Charles Dickens et al., Mugby Junction (London: Hesperus, 2005)
  • J. A. Baker, The Peregrine (New York: NYRB Classics, 2005)
  • Ian Frazier, Great Plains (London: Granta, 2006)
  • John Muir, My First Summer In The Sierra (Edinburgh: Canongate, 2006)
  • Tim Robinson, The Stones of Aran: Pilgrimage (New York: NYRB Classics, and London: Faber, 2008)
  • Kate Rew, Wild Swim (Guardian Books, 2008)
  • William Daniell, A Voyage Round The Coast of Great Britain (Folio Books, 2008)
  • Edward Thomas, The South Country (Dovecote Press, 2009)
  • John Christopher, The Death of Grass (Penguin Modern Classics, 2009)
  • John Stewart Collis, The Worm Forgives The Plough (Vintage Modern Classics, 2009)

References

  1. ^ "Robert Macfarlane wins book award". BBC. December 2003. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  2. ^ Robert Macfarlane's homepage at the website of the Cambridge English Faculty
  3. ^ Cabinet Magazine interview
  4. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2007/mar/18/fiction.shakespeare
  5. ^ Macfarlane, Robert (2007). The Wild Places. Granta Books. p. 340. ISBN 1862079412.
  6. ^ BBC Radio 4 schedule for 3 September 2007 Retrieved 2 October 2007.
  7. ^ "2008 Book Awards". The Banff Centre. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  8. ^ Boyd Tonkin (2008-07-18). "Call of the wild: Britain's nature writers". The Independent. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  9. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/series/commonground

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