Friday, 23 March 2012

Extract from 'Around Annapurna'



I remained outside later than everybody else. It may have been sensible to settle at dusk, to get into a good trekking routine, but I needed to feel the thickness of the air on my face and to touch the baked ground of an unfamiliar continent. I was drawn towards the village’s single room dwellings. Through the open doorway I saw two bundles on a trestle table, the tops of tiny human heads and the tightly swaddled blankets around their infant bodies. There was no other furniture except the saucepans on the wall and I assumed that their parents were sitting out of view on the floor near the candle.

There was something reassuring in the austerity of the clay, wood and metal and it gave me the confidence to wander alone for a mile or so along the track alive with clicking, trills and whistles from unseen mouths.

As we approached each village on subsequent days, we were greeted by clasped hands and bowed heads, - from women at their pots, toddlers in filthy vests and wellingtons, or whoever



‘Namaste!’ they said, meaning ‘I salute the God within you!’ 


We were careful in our responses and easily drawn into the sincerity of the ceremony.

(nb. 'While Giants Sleep' does not contain photographs. These have been included only for the purposes of this blog. Photographs are taken from Google Images ) 

Saturday, 10 March 2012

Conversation with David Duncombe

AM. It is almost thirty years since I moved into a house in Matlock and found that living just down the road from me was an accomplished and published poet. Our conversations over the intervening years have certainly motivated me in my writing and I've also benefited from your critical reading of various drafts of things I've written. I'm wondering about the origins of your literary interests. Were you from a 'bookish' household or were there any particularly inspiring teachers in your schools?   
     
DD: There were few books in my very happy working-class home, but my rigorous primary school encouraged us to join the local library.  Once it was clear that I was a keen reader, my parents bought me books like the Books of Knowledge (a kind of encyclopaedia) and The Empire Youth Annual, which I still have.  
I started school in wartime and loved stories of adventure, travel and combat.  None of them seemed to feature people from my background, however, so I never felt qualified to write anything like them.  In the first wave of 11+ children at grammar school, I was certainly inspired to learn, but not to write creatively.  At university, reading English in the era of F.R. Leavis and L.C. Knights, I became a trained critic, able to recognise good writing.  The poet of the time was T.S Eliot, someone else with whom I had little in common.  Only my own years working in Africa, the army and the RAF gave me the confidence to realise that I now lived in the world that I had previously only read about, plus the view that any walk of life had its interest.  In my late thirties I then wanted to write, but it was a broad ambition and an idea could as easily be for a novel, a play, a short story or a line in a poem.

AM: David, you have already raised a number of interesting avenues I would like to explore. Perhaps firstly we could talk about class? Like you I came from a working class background – the respectable end of our council estate, mind you – and went to the town’s grammar school. However, unlike you, I found the formal study of literature impossible, an alien experience. At an earlier age, I’d devoured the ‘populist’ Famous Five, William and Biggles books, and loved our public library, but I didn’t have the patience or application for the more ‘improving’  hardback ‘ Childrens’ Classics’ that kindly aunts sometimes bought me as Christmas presents. By adolescence I was struggling with, and in the main part rejecting, what I, at the time, judged to be reading matter for ‘posh’ and conformist kids. I’m curious about what you think it was about your experience or you yourself that held you into the academic study of literature? (Conversely, of course, I’m curious as to what it was about me and mine that, at that age, didn’t).        


DD: I grew up in Coventry, a ‘boom’ town of car factories and well-paid workers hopeful that their children would not follow them on to the assembly line. 
I had no specific ambition, apart from wanting to travel away to places I had only experienced in film and books.  I read the Biggles and Just William books too and those boys’ papers like Hotspur, which were also full of adventure, often featuring public school types.  
I was not technically or scientifically minded, but found myself enchanted in the world of literature and history.  Dickens, of course, was no more distant from my generation than Lawrence is to the present one and of course was not, in his own time, a ‘classic’ writer, but rather widely read and extremely popular.  Perhaps I was ‘conformist’ in a way, but I think conformist to the new post-war working-class movement in which we felt we were as good as anyone else and the good things, literature included, should be accessible.  Only a narrow part of my education was in school, since much of my life was church-based: scouts, choir, altar service, youth club, sport.  I was confident in these areas and further encouraged to learn.  The King James Bible was certainly an early introduction to the beauty of language.  Paradoxically, I think I was fortunate not to have been exposed to any vocational guidance, and so stayed open-minded until after university and National Service 

AM: I see why we have no problem conversing for a whole day whilst out walking, we share a strong enthusiasm for some interests and have some similar influences whilst also having had interestingly diverse life experiences in other respects. I too loved those boys’ papers like the Wizard and the Hotspur and, although I’ve long been distancing myself from religion, the language of the King James Bible has been popping up unbidden in my thoughts since my first acquaintance with it in childhood. I find it interesting that you didn’t want to write until your late thirties – ‘the famous novelist with the uncontrollable compulsion to produce stories since very early childhood’ seems to be such a cliché these days - and I understand the rationale you have outlined. Did your relatively late start mean that you were able to by-pass the embarrassing ‘early works’ adolescence (and beyond) of many writers? Can you say a little about your early efforts and publications?


DD: Yes, I recognised good writing for what it was, but simply lacked the self-confidence to produce my own work.  Then I met my wife Shirley, left the RAF, became more politically aware, and my life, which had previously been exciting and enjoyable, also became a time of change and greater possibilities.  I started to write poetry and from the beginning, I had some success in publishing my poems in the local newspaper, magazines and like you, Andy, enjoying success in competitions.  I remember a magazine called Ostrich, which I think was quite political.  I still enjoy competitions because of the anonymity of the judging.  Because I was a late starter, I suppose I had plenty to write about.  And I continue to write poems based on events from years before, recorded briefly in notebooks and diaries, finding that the important issues stay fresh and other detail happily fades away.  The topics came from all quarters: nature, love, sport, social situations.  A year or two after I started writing poetry, I tried my hand at stories and drama; in fact the ideas came thick and fast and at first I didn’t know if a new idea would become a line in a poem, or in fact a novel.  I wrote two novels, both published, for children before I found that it was not a good way for me to escape from my day job as a teacher.  The main successes with my drama and short stories were with the BBC, whom I can’t praise enough as an organisation which does give new writers a chance.  I had enormous energy, having great enthusiasm for my work in a good progressive comprehensive school, a young family, a busy political and social life – and the ability to get up at 5 a.m. like Anthony Trollope and write for a  couple of hours before the rest of the day’s activities.

AM: Great stuff, David. Unlike Trollope and yourself and one or two others I’ve known, I’ve never been able to be coherent or even alert in the very early morning. I do agree about the virtues of competitions. My own achievements in this respect, although fairly modest, have been a terrific boost to my sense of myself as a writer and competitions do allow ‘beginners’ to submit work under the cloak of anonymity with confidence that it will be considered fairly alongside the offerings of the great and the good. Additionally, I suppose, success can tell established poets that their work is still considered of high merit and that they are not merely riding on their reputation.
Can we go back to youngsters and literature? After the RAF, you became an English teacher, and later a head teacher, committed to the comprehensive ideal. I’ve said above that I didn’t really switch on to literature at my grammar school and I accept that that may have been more about me than my teachers or the curriculum. May have been. So I wonder, looking back, how you view the success of your endeavours in this respect? Do you have any views on continuing educational developments especially in relation to kids and literature nowadays? What advice would you give to somebody like your younger self just starting out as an English teacher?  

DD:  “Don’t start from here!” I’d have to say.  The modern curriculum, with its centrally directed platitudes from people who simply do not know the vast majority of children, is simply crippling.  Inspired teachers have always brought their enthusiasms to the task.  I do not think it matters what those enthusiasms are, but they will always transfer.  For me the answer was to encourage students, from eleven-year-olds with learning difficulties to Cranwell cadets, to write about themselves, to find the poets inside themselves.  I would let them write without hindrance: there were other times and places to correct grammar to teach conventional sentence construction (and I cared very much about those things too).  A touch of Kes, I suppose, but it works.  The computer can help – children who have physical difficulty in writing, spelling and so forth can still get their thoughts down.  I would tell them not to worry at all about punctuation, but to use line breaks.  Creative expression was vital and achieved so well through poetry and drama.  In fact, the spelling, grammar and punctuation would follow successfully when the pupils had something they actually wanted to say.  The other point is that young people who regard themselves as poets/writers do not feel excluded from the world of literature.  The teacher, naturally needs to introduce them to books they will relate to, in the first place.  The two children’s novels I had published both centred on children from ‘ordinary’ backgrounds: a boy on a council estate who becomes an amateur boxer; another who belongs to an airforce family and gets lost overseas.  Not all children are drawn to fantasy or historical novels; they need to start nearer home.  The rest will follow.  Oh dear, the years of retirement seem to have melted away.  Sorry for the lecture.  I’m particularly sad that inspired teachers are no longer allowed to choose the literature for the English syllabus in the old Mode III way.  We did that because we respected literature and wanted the best for children, which was not some watered down version of what happens in public schools, but something vital and relevant and likely to lead towards the classics rather than away from it.  Time I stopped.

AM: Stirring stuff, David. Good to hear it. Let’s find a barricade and go man it. I worked as a teacher briefly for Alec Clegg in the old West Riding forty years ago and loved his view that teachers needed to be nurtured and encouraged to become artists themselves. So, we were frequently given help to become better painters, musicians, writers, dancers(!), in the belief that if our enthusiasm was genuine then it would transfer to kids. Technique, the discipline of the craft, could then be more easily learned once driven by a genuine creative pride. What a long way from today’s centrally prescribed curriculum and the interminable, Ofsted-fearing box-ticking.
I started this conversation by referring to the help you have given me with my writing over the years. I still have some early drafts of pieces from ‘Hanging in the Balance’ with your pencilled comments on them. Looking at them now I realise even more how helpful they were to me, both in terms of improving those pieces then  but also in terms of teaching me broader principles that I’ve continued to benefit  from – cutting out excess verbiage, not being pretentiously ‘creative’, reigning in a tendency towards too much obscurantism. Also, trusting my own judgement more once I’ve given a piece its final, very critical read through. You’ve continued to help less experienced writers in various ways. Could you say a little about your activities in this respect and, if you can, about the sorts of help you find adult writers need and seem to benefit from?        

DD:  Adult writers have two advantages:  life experience and the motivation to express themselves.   Having something worthwhile to say is the first requirement, whether it is an unusual narrative, observation of a relationship, the impact of something in the natural world or powerful emotion.  All of us are moved in these ways, but aspiring to be an original and effective poet is a huge ambition.  When I have run workshops my first advice has often been to write down your thoughts on the supposed subject (it can often change in the process) quite rapidly, with little thought as to line length or indeed any of the crafting process.  It is surprising how much can come out.  Then you can think about shape, sound, exact vocabulary.  We are all generally better at editing and correcting than getting things right first time.   
Obviously there’s not room here for the kind of compendium of advice that so many tutors and literary advisors have produced, but there are one or two pointers.  One is to cut out anything which tries to explain events or emotions already expressed: you must leave the intelligence of the reader to find a meaning; a degree of mystery is always beguiling.  I don’t understand the intricacies of climbing, for instance, but love your use of the technical terms – they add authenticity – and your climbing pieces are complete metaphors in themselves for the challenging events and relationships that the reader can apply them to. 
Also, I like to see poems with concrete language, i.e. not ‘cruelty’, ‘passion’, ‘love’, ‘unhappiness’, but actions, observations that show these processes.   Often poets want to comment on important public issues: I advise an oblique approach.  If you write directly about e.g. political events, you may for a short while be topical, but it will soon date.   And you would need an extraordinary talent to write directly about say, the Holocaust or a war you had not experienced, though you may have material about a survivor or a historic place you have visited which could provide a poem or story.  You can often make a breakthrough when a piece of work doesn’t seem right, by changing from first to third person or vice versa.  If you are putting down an experience you have directly experienced, making the narrator ‘he’ or ‘she’ can provide freedom to achieve a poetic truth rather than the narrow historical one you started with. 
I’ve said nothing about submitting work to magazines and publishers, but honestly I think that would have to be very specific advice to an individual to be effective.  There are general tips in all the guidebooks.   I could go on, but will end by simply advising any writer to make sure to share their work with somebody along the way.  I still have a monthly workshop with two accomplished poets whose opinion I trust.  Sometimes your strengths and weaknesses show themselves simply in the process of reading the poem aloud. 

AM: Thank you so much for all of this, David. I hope that others reading this interview, whoever they may be, can gain some of the benefits that I have had from our conversations over the years. I hope also that others will want to seek out your work if they are not already familiar with it and I am including here a link to your latest publication, ‘Borders, Baggage’:    


The image of Major Cheung in the park early morning with colleagues from his old military days alongside the calligraphers with their evaporating characters seems both strong and wistful and a good one with which to conclude. Thank you.

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Overview of Contents

This book is an anthology of published and unpublished prose and poetry written over a period of more than 40 years. It is presented in four sections:
  • The first - 'Hey You!' - consists of a short set of early poems written between  1964 and 1970.
  • The second section is a reprint of a booklet published in 1988 entitled 'Hanging in the Balance' which received very favourable reviews in the climbing and mountaineering press. Terry Gifford, the Director of the International Festival of Mountaineering Literature judged that '... this brave, fragile pamphlet of four essays and six poems... is the best writing I've read in ages. Better than whole books of empty narrative, this little bit of autobiography climbs through the important things in life.' (High Magazine, 1988). A leading British rock climber and published poet, Ed Drummond, also gave a very positive review in Mountain Magazine (1988) '... Who can say when or how hope springs? Today, like a ray of sunlight, a small book has landed on my desk ... it may already be a collector's item. For there is a breath of humanity in this book'. 'Hanging in the Balance' has long been out of print and is reprinted here in full.
  • Section three is entitled 'Away and Away' and comprises four essays and ten poems. Among the latter, 'Two Glasses' was Highly Commended in the 1989 Mary Wilkins Memorial Poetry Competition and 'Attempting to Interfere' won First Prize in the Yeovil Literary Prize for Poetry. The Yeovil Prize judge, highly regarded poet,  novelist and BBC producer, Daisy Goodwin, described this poem as having '... a distinctive voice...' and being '... mysterious but repaying a close reading'
  • The final section, 'Peninsular Days', consists of four essays that describe various segments of the South West Coast Path, a 630-mile walk undertaken in stages over 8 years by the author. This walk follows the spectacular coastal scenery of Devon, Cornwall and Dorset in a continuous line from Minehead to Lands End and then Poole Harbour.


Collected together, many of these pieces cohere around themes of risk and danger, tests of commitment, and the exhiliration in being alive alongside the great joys and the challenges to be experienced in human relationships, many of these themes serving as metaphors for the others.

Monday, 5 March 2012

Review on Amazon by Victoria Lewis

'A Refreshing and Soulful Read. This collection of stories and poems vividly paints a picture of the author's experiences in life and love. Inspiring and entertaining, sometimes painful, but ultimately optimistic, this is a thoroughly good read'. 


Many thanks for this very positive review, Victoria 

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Conversation with Roger Draper

AM: The first item in my book is a poem written and published, to my great surprise, in our school magazine in 1964. I enjoyed, in the Acknowledgments, being able to cite that this was also published by 'Weymouth Poetry Sheets'. These were your creation. Can you say a little about their origin and format?

RD:  Well Andy, it came about after I had read ‘Dharma Bums’ by Jack Kerouac which introduced me to Zen Bhuddism and the American Beat Poets. I read about Beat Poets holding poetry sessions at Venice Beach and I thought “we could do that, Weymouth’s a beach town too”. I was used to printing on an ink duplicator and so got some friends to let me print their poems on foolscap sheets and sell them for a penny on the beach front. Len the potter let me place them on his shelf in the alleyway where he threw pots and I guess people who watched him but didn’t want to buy a pot bought a poetry sheet as a gesture.

AM: This all comes flooding back, the summer of 1965 and the brilliance of the seaside colours. I was terrified that somebody would read my stuff and scoff at its immaturity and pretentiousness. But I also enjoyed the fantasy of being part of a ‘movement’, however tiny, parochial and tame it seemed compared to those American Beats. And, of course, seeing one’s own words in typewritten print was at that time a very rare and rather wonderful experience. I seem to remember that Len the potter had sold thirteen and sixpence’s worth of my booklet, ‘Hey You’, when he popped next door for a coffee and somebody nicked the takings. 


We first met at school when I was about 12 or 13 and you were a couple of years older. Like me, you did science rather than arts subjects at A level. A lot was made of that divide then, C. P. Snow’s ‘Two Cultures’ and all that. Do you think your own writing and perhaps the books you chose to read were different from what they might have been as a result of formally studying subjects like biology rather than literature? What else were you reading at that time?  

RD: Well - science was exciting then, Harold Wilson had talked about the new white heat of technology, I was reading all about psychoanalysis, I loved history and politics, my biology teacher was a sort of beatnik proto-feminist and ran the Art Club - no I didn't see any divide between art and science. Only a divide between those who were caught up in lots of new thoughts in the world of ideas and those who weren't.
AM: I agree that science was exciting then. My A-level Physics class was taken on a visit to Winfrith Atomic Energy Establishment and we all climbed the little ladder and stood, in our school uniforms, on top of the reactor, a few feet of warm and vibrating reinforced concrete between us and a caged, minor sun struggling to burst out into the universe. I’m maybe being a little fast and loose with the science here but that’s the sense of it in my memory. That, and the innocence and the optimism of the time.
I felt at that age that I was dabbling in topics of huge intellectual and societal significance in a way that my contemporaries carrying around their Virginia Wolf and their Chaucer weren’t. And I’m wondering now whether my ignorance of the ‘established’ literary canon, and therefore my lack of confidence with it, was instrumental in my seizing hold of the sexy alternative offered by the Beats. Do you have any views on that? I had the sense, and I may be wrong, that in the breadth and quantity of your reading then, the established ‘Eng Lit’ authors and poets were not as prominent as they might have been for people studying literature formally at school?    
RD: Well I have never read much of the Eng Lit canon - in fact for the first time I'm reading Anthony Trollope, having decided to join Val in a series of WEA talks on the novelist at the local St John's Ambulance Hall. But I have always been perverse enough not to like what everyone else likes - I didn't rate 'On The Road' by Kerouac, nor 'Catcher In The Rye' by Salinger though I loved their other works. I've always liked contemporary authors more than the classics.  But re the 'Two Cultures', I've had a real buzz all my life from teaching science not withstanding my devotion to religion, art, gastronomy ...
Some of the time of the Weymouth Poetry Sheets era overlapped with my transition from school to college - Chelsea College in the Kings Road in London in 1963 - the zoology department in which I was studying was on the top floor of the building shared with the Chelsea School of Art. While I was there it moved across the road to new buildings where exhibitions of the new art were shown on the ground floor. This was the time of Abstract Expressionism and the start of Pop Art. That was very exciting too. I had done the paintings of Acker Bilk and Sgt Bilko with collaged newspapers, ice cream wrappers and playing cards before I went to London and it was great seeing famous artists doing the same.
AM: Gosh, talk about coincidences and inter-connectedness! I've just said the same thing about Kerouac and Salinger myself in a conversation I'm having concurrently for this blog with the Cheshire poet, John Lindley. And, I think Trollope is Vally's favourite author. I've never read him but, if Bridport wasn't a couple of hundred miles away, I know we'd be down at that St John's Ambulance Hall with you. What a vivid picture of London (and Weymouth) at that time you paint - at least you do for me - and, talking of painting, if those Acker Bilk and Sgt Bilko paintings ever go up for auction, please let me know. I've long admired them and they capture the era for me as much as any writing does.
Now then (as we say up here in Sheffield) 'beatnik proto-feminist' biology teachers in respectable early-1960s grammar schools on the south coast – whatever was the world coming to? Well, we know now and it was all rather wonderful. Can you say a little more about this inspirational figure and her influence upon the artistic - and personal - development of a group of youngsters? I was a little younger than the rest of you, a sort of junior member, but these influences felt life-changing to me too.   
RD: Eileen Fowler was an inspirational figure for me - I became a biology teacher as well! She had a way of teaching that showed the wholeness of things, how they interconnected. She also was able to fire your imagination on a host of other areas as well – poetry, conservation, psychology. For example, I read Lynne Reid Banks' 'The L-shaped Room' because she had recommended it to me (none of my English teachers ever recommended a modern novel to read). There was a bit of 'The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie' set about it but I wasn't a leading light as she had left teaching before I got to the sixth form to do Botany & Zoology A levels. Eileen ran the Art Group after school and the Field Club. I think I learned to work a 16 mm cine projector and we showed educational films from the county library and I certainly learned to work a stencil duplicator and to type out the Field Club magazine which stood me in good stead when I became editor of the Chelsea college newspaper in London.
AM: The Field Club was where I first met you, Eileen and the others. Here is a photo of club members out on a weekend walk which came to light when I was clearing out my mother’s attic a couple of years ago. It is from a different era and doesn’t it look it? It seems to me as if it comes from the 1920s or 30s rather than from my lifetime. Eileen can be seen centre left in conversation and I’m one of the two smallest people just discernible at the back. Clowning about with his hand raised is our friend Ivan, whom sadly we lost in 2010. You told me that when you showed it to him, not long before he died, Ivan was able to name everybody in it.   
Last autumn I was asked by a friend if I would like to attend a weekend seminar on the Rhine, near Koblenz, and give a talk on Bob Dylan. I went and found a small group of people of various nationalities who came together occasionally to give talks to each other, to draw, paint and write and to explore a locality on foot. As we walked on the high plateaux on the western bank of the Rhine near the Lorelei Rocks, talking in twos and threes about the ancient and recent history of the region, Turner’s paintings of the river, and whatever, I was struck by how familiar and agreeable it all seemed. It was the Field Club – different people, different place and in a different time. When I later emailed this photo to these people they responded warmly to it, recognising an ethos and activity they all valued too.         
Roger, we have been walking and talking for over 50 years. You were there with the 1964 poem at the beginning of my ‘Giants’ book and you have very recently joined me on the South West Coast Path, with which my book ends. Thank you for the stimulating company over so many years. Posted by Picasa

Saturday, 11 February 2012

Alastair Walker's review on Amazon

An incredibly generous review of my book from Alastair Walker:

‘Andy Miller has created an eclectic mix of prose and poetry that uses writing over a forty year period to illustrate some of the most important influences on his journey through life. Each piece is different but helps to represent a coherent set of attitudes and feelings. He is adept at bringing landscapes to life and the impact of those landscapes on people struggling to traverse them. He is even more adept, with a very light word-sketch touch, at introducing us to the character of those whom he meets. The book is both unique and excellent’.

I met Alastair, an experienced writer and sailor from N. Ireland, on my recent Tall Ships holiday. He was excellent company with the ability to tell a good story with wit and intelligence. Hence, and having heard quite a bit about its central arguments, I know I can recommend his forthcoming book, Four Thousand Lives Lost, as a fascinating, informative and well-argued read. He recognises that everybody knows about the Titanic and Lusitania but not so many have heard of the sinking of the Empress of Ireland in May 1914 on the St Lawrence in which more passengers died. Even fewer know about the first liner to be torpedoed, the Falaba, just six weeks before the sinking of the Lusitania.


Alastair looks at the context in which these tragedies occurred, both the peacetime situation up to 1914 and the changed wartime risks that ships faced after August that year. I hadn’t realised that the inquiries into these four tragedies had all been carried out by the same man – Lord Mersey. The book focuses on the captains whose decisions and actions at sea were at the centre of events but also asks questions of Lord Mersey himself. Was he over-concerned to protect the interests of the shipping companies? Did he stick too closely to the government line? Or was he his own man, making considered judgments in the face of complex and harrowing information?

I’m also recommending Alastair’s accompanying blog where these issues are discussed further – and up-dated in the light of the very recent sinking of the Italian ship, the Costa Concordia, with further loss of life:

Monday, 6 February 2012

Over The Moors


A few years ago, out of the blue, I received an email from an old climbing friend in Buxton. He had been contacted by Martin Kocsis from the British Mountaineering Council who was trying to track me down to request permission to use various quotes from my 1988 collection 'Hanging in the Balance' (now incorporated into 'While Giants Sleep').

Martin, with Niall Grimes, was compiling a rock climbers' guide to the remote and wonderful climbing grounds in the northern reaches of the Peak District. I was deeply flattered that they wanted to use some of my material to accompany a set of beautiful photographs in this stunning new publication. In fact, it was this external corroboration, totally unexpected, that encouraged me to look again at 'Hanging... ' and, combined with my success in the Yeovil Prize, to contemplate producing 'Giants'.

Climbing guides have always been special publications. I have a few from the 1930s, their terse accounts lacking any unnecessary verbiage and the routes illustrated only by a vague dotted line meandering up a rough sketch of the mountainside. It was an era of stoical self-determination and understatement - '...with some difficulty...' was usually code for a heart-in-the-mouth, clinging-by-the-fingernails move - although sometimes a suitable bilberry ledge where a pleasant pipe could be taken might also be recommended. Nowadays, these books are lavish productions which honor the historical development of the area, with marvelous archive photos, alongside details of breath-taking, contemporary developments.    

This part of the Peak District, especially the Kinder Scout and Bleaklow plateaus, has always been somewhere I've retreated to, often on my own, in all kinds of weather. I've been lost more than once, contemplating spending the night standing in my rucsac, and being spooked by stumbling upon old aircraft wreckage. I've known it with the heather ripe and dripping with purple and I've occasionally climbed on its coarse and roughened grit, seen the black tips of a mountain hare speeding away from me across the snow, heard the contemptuous, matronly cackle of grouse undercover somewhere out on the moor.        

The atmosphere of this landscape affected the mood of some of the pieces in 'Hanging ...' but I hadn't referred to the places specifically or by name. So, I'm doubly delighted; obviously, by being included in such a landmark publication but also by the fact that these editors valued my earlier booklet and, especially, that they considered that I had been able to evoke some of the moods and majesty of these high Peak District moors and crags.


'Over The Moors' edited by Martin Kocsis & Niall Grimes and published by the British Mountaineering Council will be published later in 2012.