Mount Adams, Pacific Crest Trail |
A few days down south in Edinburgh recently included a meeting with a
publisher, an art exhibition and a talk at a book festival as well as time with
family.
The publisher was Sandstone Press and my meeting with head
man Bob Davidson and designer Heather MacPherson of Raspberry Creative Type was to finalise details for my
book on the Pacific Crest Trail, Rattlesnakesand Bald Eagles. I now know the format, how many words (I’d better start
writing!), and the picture requirements. My photos are all Kodachrome 64
slides, the walk taking place long before digital, and I’ve just spent an
evening sorting out 200 to send to Bob and Heather so a cover and around 150
for inside can be selected and scanned. For hours now I’ve been back in 1982 on
that glorious walk.
Two days after my book meeting I was talking about
wilderness writing and reading from Grizzly
Bears and Razor Clams at the Portobello Book Festival. I shared the event
with Kellan MacInnes, author of Caleb’sList, and it was interesting hearing how another writer works – not so
differently it seems, except that he’s writing before I’m usually awake. After
the event a stroll along the sea front and a pint in a pub with fellow outdoor writers David Lintern
and Phil Turner was a good way to unwind.
Between the publisher and the book festival I visited the
Peter Doig exhibition at the Scottish National Gallery. I didn’t know much
about this artist but I was attracted by the big banners and painted pillars
outside the gallery. Doig is an artist who does big, bold paintings with dense
deep colours and solid powerful images. He’s a very ‘painterly’ painter in that
whilst his works aren’t abstract they aren’t naturalistic either and you can
see the daubs of paint and the trickles where it has run. This exhibition was
about his work since moving to Trinidad in
2002 and the landscapes were lush and tropical. I liked the colour and the
power and the size of the paintings. He’s an artist I’ll look out for in the
future.
Looking forward to the new book, Chris, as I really enjoyed Razor Clams and Grizzly Bears.
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PS ....or even Grizzly Bears and Razor Clams!
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