Step into the hide for a glorious new encounter with the british wild.
Close to Adam Nicolson's home in Sussex, there is a forgotten field overrun by bracken and thicketed by brambles. It is the haunt of deer and many birds - nightingales, the occasional cuckoo, ravens, robins, owls and in summer the sweet-singing warblers that come north from Africa to breed in English woods.
This gorgeous book charts his attempt to encounter birds, to engage with a marvellous layer of life he had previously almost ignored. He wanted to look and listen, to return to 'bird school' and see what it might teach him.
He built a small shed amongst the trees with nesting boxes and bird feeders. Cocooned inside, season after season, he got to know the birds: where they nest, how they sing, how they mate and fight, what preys on them, what they are like as living things.
Beautifully written and woven through with philosophy, literature, science and a sense of wonder, always conscious that that this is an age in which the natural world is under siege, _Bird School_ pulls back the curtain on seemingly ordinary birds, taking a long, careful and concerned look at our relationship with the wild.
ADAM NICOLSON is a prize-winning writer of many books on history, nature and the countryside including _The Sea is Not Made of Water_, _The Making of Poetry_, _Sea Room_, _God's Secretaries_, _The Gentry_ and the acclaimed _The Mighty Dead_. His 2017 book, _Seabird's Cry_ was picked as Waterstones Book of the Month in Scotland and won the prestigious Wainwright Prize for nature writing and the Jeffries Prize. He is the winner of the Royal Society of Literature's Ondaatje Prize, the Somerset Maugham Award, the W.H. Heinemann Award and the British Topography Prize. He has written and presented many television series and lives on a farm in Sussex.