€14.00
‘A poignant, practical and moving story of how to fix our broken land, this should be conservation’s salvation; this should be its future; this is a new hope’ – Chris Packham
Winner of the Richard Jefferies Society / White Horse Book Shop Award for Nature Writing
In Wilding, Isabella Tree tells the story of the ‘Knepp experiment’, a pioneering rewilding project in West Sussex, using free-roaming grazing animals to create new habitats for wildlife.
Part gripping memoir, part fascinating account of the ecology of our countryside, Wilding is, above all, an inspiring story of hope.
Highly Commended by the Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing
‘One of the landmark ecological books of the decade’ – The Sunday Times
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This must be the most inspirational nature book of the year . . . a narrative of conservation, courage, vision and miracles… The story of what happened is thrilling . . . the Knepp Conservation Project is world-famous: a beacon of hope . . . Read this book and marvel.
Daily Mail – Bel Mooney, ‘The Year’s Best Books on Nature’
Particularly timely . . . an excellent primer, and anyone who is interested in how we share the planet – what it looks like, what we eat, and what nature can teach us – should read this book.
Sunday Times
A poignant, practical and moving story of how to fix our broken land, this should be conservation's salvation; this should be its future; this is a new hope.
Chris Packham, presenter of The Really Wild Show
I recently read Wilding, by Isabella Tree, where she and her husband take their over-farmed, not-profitable estate, and rewild it. Thousands of species return. It will have you in tears. Life exploding again – the reverse of most stories today. Hugely recommended.
Caitlin Moran (on Twitter)
The remarkable story of an astounding transformation.
George Monbiot, author of Feral
Wilding shines brilliantly . . . . Isabella Tree writes [. . .] with infectious enthusiasm . . . The project she writes about so winningly . . . is inspirational – and inspiration is needed.
Evening Standard
A hugely important addition to the literature of what can be done to restore soil and soul . . . Tree writes with grace about a legion of doubts, obstructions and delays. The book contains moments of lyricism and revelation.
Guardian – Caspar Henderson
Close to my book of the year. If there’s anything better, I haven’t read it yet . . . An uplifting story and points towards a different sort of farmed future.
Daily Mail – Marcus Berkmann, ‘Best Books for Summer Reading’
'Wilding is both a timely and important book . . . Isabella Tree imagines the last migrating turtledove departing Knepp and flying over a Europe “that is being recolonized by beavers, wolves, wolverines, jackals and bears.” And it is in that changing landscape that hope resides.'
New York Review of Books – Tim Flannery
Every farmer (and perhaps every conservationist) in Britain needs to go and spend a day at Knepp. The Knepp ‘wilding’ project is a vitally important experiment for working out what we can do to let Nature back into our farmed landscapes . . . This book tells this vital story and deserves to be widely read.
James Rebanks, author of A Shepherd’s Life
Read Wilding by Isabella Tree . . . Thrilling.
The Times – India Knight
This honest, thoroughly researched and deeply hopeful book will appeal to everyone – especially farmers – who is concerned about how intensive farming practices are degrading the environment and how to restore nature to ravaged lands.
Forbes – Ten Of The Best Books About Climate Change, Conservation And The Environment of 2018
This inspiring and encouraging book demonstrates how nature can shake off the ravages of industrial farming and heal itself.
John Meadley, founder of Pasture for Life
A thrilling, inspiring and deeply moving story of a wildlife revolution on an ordinary English farm, Wilding shows us what we have lost and what we could regain if we change our relationship with the countryside.
Patrick Barkham, author of Badgerlands
Wilding describes the inspirational story of a pioneering rewilding experiment that is changing the way we look at Nature, the countryside and conservation. Beautifully written, it marks the moment when the task at hand can no longer be about slowing down the inexorable decline of wildlife, but to begin the job of restoration.
Tony Juniper, former Executive Director of Friends of the Earth
Anyone with any interest in land – from a window-box to a National Park – needs to read this book.
Simon Barnes, author of The Meaning of Birds