Weren't they richer, rock pools, wasn't the seashore busier, when I
was a kid?
Richard Smyth had always been drawn to the natural world, but when he
became a father he found a new joy and a new urgency in showing his kids
the everyday wild things around them. As he and his children explore
rockpools in Whitley Bay, or the woods and moors near his Yorkshire
home, he imagines the world they might inhabit as they grow up.
Through different objects discovered on their wanderings - a beech leaf,
a jay feather, a limpetshell - Smyth examines his own past as well as
that of the early natural historians, weaving together history, memoir,
and environmentalism to form a new kind of nature writing: one that asks
both what we have lost, and what we have yet to find.