Tristan Gooley’s follow-up to the successful The Natural Navigator is subtitled Understanding Your Landscape and that’s
what the book is about, if you take “landscape” in its widest context to include
culture and philosophy as well as actual land. The author’s intention is to
encourage travellers to be inquisitive about where they are in all its aspects,
an intention which I happily endorse. Curiosity is an invaluable trait.
Whilst there are references to many explorers three nineteenth
century ones run through the book, linked by their interest in everything they
saw – Alexander Humbolt who explored South America from 1799 to 1804, Ludwig
Leichhardt who explored north-east Australia from 1844-45 and Charles Darwin,
who went round the world from 1831-36 (I recently read Darwin’s Voyage of the
Beagle, an interesting and thought-provoking book).
Aspects of the natural world – plants, mountains, coasts, ice,
animals, sky, weather and more – make up almost half the book, after which the
author ranges widely, covering subjects from cities and worldly goods to
beauty, inner time and mood, and imagination and wonder. In all twenty-nine
topics are covered, with facts and ideas crammed in, which does give a rather
breathless feel to the text in places. Mountains are covered in just twelve
pages, rivers in thirteen and time in fifteen. As the information rushes past,
the facts piling on top of each other, it’s easy to lose track of much of it. For
that reason I think this is a book to read slowly or to dip into now and then, leaving
time to ponder and digest.
Inevitably in a book that covers so much so briefly there
are some misleading simplifications (the description of the difference between the
theories of Lamarck and Darwin is one) and some partial or dubious statements
(pre-dawn starts for mountain ascents are not usually to reach the summit for
the best views before clouds sweep in – avoiding avalanches and thunderstorms
is usually more important!). I don’t think these matter though – in a book so
stuffed full there are bound to be some errors. The whole point of the book is
to encourage enquiry anyway. Go out and check!
Although designed to cover all types of journeys I think
this book is particularly relevant to walkers. Walking is the right speed to
see, contemplate and learn about landscapes. This book will help you do so.
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