Collected notes from avid walker Christopher Somerville's treks
through the British countryside.
In Christopher Somerville's workroom is a case of shelves that holds
four hundred and fifty notebooks. Their pages are creased and stained
with mud, blood, flattened insects, beer glass rings, smears of plant
juice, and gallons of sweat. Everything Somerville has written about
walking the British countryside has had its origin in these little black
and red books.
During the lockdowns and enforced isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic,
Somerville began to revisit this treasury of notes, spanning forty years
of exploring on foot. The View from the Hill pulls together the best
of his written collections, following the cycle of the seasons from a
freezing January on the Severn Estuary to the sight of sunrise on
Christmas morning from inside a prehistoric burial mound. In between are
hundreds of walks to discover toads in a Cumbrian spring, trout in a
Hampshire chalk stream, a lordly red stag at the autumn rut on the Isle
of Mull, and three thousand geese at full gabble in the wintry Norfolk
sky. Somerville's writing enables readers to enjoy these magnificent
walks without stirring from the comfort of home.