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A new book from Robert Ashton, the 2024 Wainwright Prize longlisted author of Where Are The Fellows Who Cut the Hay? . . . 

 

To forget how to dig the earth and to tend the soil is to forget ourselves’ Gandhi

We rely on soil for our food, for the rich biodiversity that defines life on this planet and much of our traditions and folklore, but are we guilty in today’s largely urban age of taking it for granted? And if we are – what is the cost?

 

The books of oral historian George Ewart Evans, farmer and journalist Adrian Bell, both of whom lived in Suffolk, described a way of life where people’s connection with the earth was intimate in a way we find hard to imagine today. H. Rider Haggard, who farmed on the Norfolk Suffolk border in the late nineteenth century vividly wrote in great detail about how the men on his farm would labour in the fields.

 

With these writers in mind, and prompted by tragedy and coincidence, I set off to explore our relationship with soil. I didn’t want to write another textbook, although I will dip into soil science, nor did I want to make a plea for environmental action, though there is an undeniable link between how we treat soil and its ability to capture, or release, damaging carbon dioxide. Instead I want to meet and learn from people whose jobs involve working with earth.

 

Each chapter will focus on one aspect of our relationship with soil, opening with how we used to think about and work with earth, drawing on books written over the past 500 years, before telling the stories of practitioners who work with earth today. From gardener to gravedigger and archaeologist to agriculturalist, I go on a quest both to deepen my own understanding of the ground beneath my feet, and perhaps also to help you, the reader, develop a more informed view of the importance of soil to our lives today.

Down to Earth

Robert Ashton
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Publication date: TBC
  • Signed Hardback Bundle
    Signed Hardback Bundle
    £30.00

    First edition hardback signed by Robert, the ebook and the name of your choice printed in the supporter list at the back of the book.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book
  • Ebook Download
    Ebook Download
    £10.00

    The ebook and the name of your choice printed in the supporter list at the back of the book.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book
  • Hardback Bundle
    Hardback Bundle
    £20.00

    First edition hardback, the ebook and the name of your choice printed in the supporter list at the back of the book.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book
  • Bookmark Bundle
    Bookmark Bundle
    £35.00

    A limited edition bookmark, the first edition hardback signed by Robert, the ebook and the name of your choice printed in the supporter list at the back of the book.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book
  • Postcard Bundle
    Postcard Bundle
    £50.00

    A set of four postcards, the bookmark, the first edition hardback signed by Robert, the ebook and the name of your choice printed in the supporter list at the back of the book.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book
  • Launch Event Bundle
    Launch Event Bundle
    £60.00

    An invitation to the virtual launch party for Down to Earth hosted by Robert, a set of four postcards, the bookmark, the first edition hardback signed by Robert, the ebook and the name of your choice printed in the supporter list at the back of the book.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book
  • Patron
    Patron
    £250.00

    The name of your choice in the front of the book, the signed hardback and an ebook.

    Name to be printed in the back of the book
    Name to be printed in the back of the book

A new book from Robert Ashton, the 2024 Wainwright Prize longlisted author of Where Are The Fellows Who Cut the Hay? . . . 

 

To forget how to dig the earth and to tend the soil is to forget ourselves’ Gandhi

We rely on soil for our food, for the rich biodiversity that defines life on this planet and much of our traditions and folklore, but are we guilty in today’s largely urban age of taking it for granted? And if we are – what is the cost?

 

The books of oral historian George Ewart Evans, farmer and journalist Adrian Bell, both of whom lived in Suffolk, described a way of life where people’s connection with the earth was intimate in a way we find hard to imagine today. H. Rider Haggard, who farmed on the Norfolk Suffolk border in the late nineteenth century vividly wrote in great detail about how the men on his farm would labour in the fields.

 

With these writers in mind, and prompted by tragedy and coincidence, I set off to explore our relationship with soil. I didn’t want to write another textbook, although I will dip into soil science, nor did I want to make a plea for environmental action, though there is an undeniable link between how we treat soil and its ability to capture, or release, damaging carbon dioxide. Instead I want to meet and learn from people whose jobs involve working with earth.

 

Each chapter will focus on one aspect of our relationship with soil, opening with how we used to think about and work with earth, drawing on books written over the past 500 years, before telling the stories of practitioners who work with earth today. From gardener to gravedigger and archaeologist to agriculturalist, I go on a quest both to deepen my own understanding of the ground beneath my feet, and perhaps also to help you, the reader, develop a more informed view of the importance of soil to our lives today.

About the author

Author

Updates

Down to Earth Update

The other day my research took me to meet a poet who has a labyrinth in the grounds of her cottage. She invited me to follow her round its winding path with a question in my mind, because she said, as...

22.10.2024
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