OnlinePizza
Food & Drink and Lifestyle
App
Download OnlinePizza-app with over 1300 affiliated restaurants, read customer reviews and get great...
NAVITIME Transit
Navigation and Travel
App
Just tap on a route map to look up transit information anywhere in the world. NAVITIME Transit...
SnoreMonitorSleepLab
Medical and Health & Fitness
App
App Name SnoreMonitor SleepLab Two years as top paid Medical App in Sweden. Most downloaded in...
Lonely Planet Scandinavia
Lonely Planet, Andy Symington, Cristian Bonetto and Carolyn Bain
Book
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet Scandinavia is your passport...
Architects' Homes
Book
This stunning book takes a rare glimpse into the intriguing and unique homes of some of the world's...
The Alchemists: Inside the Secret World of Central Bankers
Book
When the first rumblings of the coming financial crisis were heard in August 2007, three men who...
What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets
Book
What Money Can't Buy is the Top Ten Sunday Times Bestseller from 'the superstar philosopher',...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Book of Trespass: Crossing the Lines That Divide Us in Books
Sep 6, 2020
Fast forward a few centuries, the few rich people still own the majority of the land in the UK, and seem to guard it jealously. There’s no way that they can use all that land, but they won’t share it. In fact, the law backs them up - if you trespass, you could be prosecuted.
Nick Hayes has written a book where he charts the history of how land has changed ownership from the many to the few, the links to colonisation and the slave trade, those who have fought to keep us and our world safe and he stages his own rebellions throughout the book. He takes us over the fences and walls to look at the land we wouldn’t otherwise see (and the descriptions are beautiful, you can feel the love he has for the countryside). He shows us that this is not a communist ideal, as some would think. In countries such as Sweden, Norway and closer to home, Scotland, there is a culture of space for all. Maybe if we could all use this land, we would learn how to best look after it.
The added bonus were the pictures (woodcuts) - bold and beautiful.
I’m already trying to think of people who would appreciate this book as a gift. It’s definitely a book to share.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and Nick Hayes for making this book available for us to read!