In Holloway, a perfect miniature prose-poem (William Dalrymple),
Macfarlane, artist Stanley Donwood, and writer Dan Richards travel to
Dorset, near the south coast of England, to explore a famed hollowed
way--a path used by walkers and riders for so many centuries that it has
become worn far down into the soft golden bedrock of the region.
In Ness, a triumphant libretto of mythic modernism for our poisoned
age (Max Porter), Macfarlane and Donwood create a modern myth about
Orford Ness, the ten-mile-long shingle spit that lies off the coast of
East Anglia, which the British government used for decades to conduct
secret weapons tests.