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The Gathering Place: A Winter Pilgrimage Through Changing Times
Hardback
Main Details
Description
Mary Colwell makes a 500-mile solo pilgrimage along the Camino Frances, winding through forests, mountains, farmland, industrial sprawls and places of worship, weaving her experiences of the Camino with natural history, spirituality and modern environmentalism. Ancient pathways through the modern world are gathering places for contemplation and touch-points for unexpected kindness, intense spirituality, demon-slaying, strange goings-on and magical tales. Pilgrims pitch themselves against heat, cold, wet, dry, hunger, thirst, and sometimes pain as the nature around them offers succour, medicine and, at times, warnings. Pilgrimages are physical journeys through space as well as metaphysical journeys through time. The same tracks follow the same routes through a planet always in flux, providing still points in a turning world. Our ancestors trod them before us and left their fretful or hopeful dreams in monuments scattered across the landscape. These ornate cathedrals, standing stones, mysterious caves and secret hermitages speak of a hunger for pardon, immortality, beauty and a release from fear. Yet, undertaking a pilgrimage is acknowledging that while the world may change, humanity does not. Pilgrims have always walked in times of upheaval. In Gathering Places, author, nature campaigner and veteran solo walker Mary Colwell relates her pilgrimage along the Camino Frances in a time of global pandemic when the focus of political power in the western world was shifting. The 500 miles of pathways of the Camino wind through mountains, forests, farmland, plains, cities, villages and industrial sprawl, as well as places of worship. In a typical year, 100,000 people walk this route or part of it. Mary walked the entire path virtually alone, nature her only fellow traveller. In this delightful book, she weaves her experiences of the Camino with natural history, history, spiritual stories and modern environmentalism.
Author Biography
Mary Colwell is an author, producer and campaigner for nature. She has written for the Guardian, BBC Wildlife, The Tablet, Country Life and many other publications. She has made documentaries for the BBC Natural History Unit in both TV and radio and has published 3 books: John Muir - the Scotsman Who Saved America's Wild Places, Curlew Moon and Beak, Tooth and Claw. Mary has won a Sony Radio Academy Gold award, the David Bellamy Award for her conservation work on curlews, the WWT Marsh Award for Conservation, and she was awarded the Dilys Breese Medal for outstanding science communication. In 2020, she set up the charity, Curlew Action.
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