In 1781, Gilbert White was a country curate, living in the Hampshire village he had known all his life. Fascinated by the fauna, flora and people around him, he kept journals for many years, and, at that time, was halfway to completing his path-breaking _The Natural History of Selborne_. No one had written like this before, with such close observation, humour, and sympathy: his spellbinding book has remained in print ever since, treasured by generations of readers.
Jenny Uglow illuminates this quirky, warm-hearted man, 'the father of ecology', by following a single year in his _Naturalist's Journal_. As his diary jumps from topic to topic, she accompanies Gilbert from frost to summer drought, from the migration of birds to the sex lives of snails and the coming of harvest.
Fresh, alive and original - and packed with rich colour illustrations - _A Year with Gilbert White_ invites us to see the natural world anew, with astonishment and wonder.
JENNY UGLOW writes on literature, art, and social history. Her books include award-winning biographies on Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot, William Hogarth, Thomas Bewick and Edward Lear, as well as group studies including _The Lunar Men_ and the panoramic _In These Times: Living in Britain through Napoleon's Wars, 1793-1815_. She is a retired editorial director of Chatto & Windus, and former Chair of the Council of the Royal Society of Literature.