
Wainwright
Milltown to Mountain
W. R. Mitchell(Author)
Great Northern Books Ltd (Publisher)
Published in October 2009
Book
Hardback
160 pages
978-1-905080-66-3 (ISBN)
Description
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991) became the proverbial legend in his own lifetime. He made the Lakeland fells his own through a series of hand-drawn, hand-written guide books. Over 200 fells became known as 'Wainwrights'. A society has been named after him. His exploits have been recently emulated in the BBC television series "Wainwright Walks". This ground-breaking, richly anecdotal and personal book about Wainwright also recalls his young days in the Lancashire mill town of Blackburn and his fascination - as a lone walker - for wild places in Lancashire, along the Pennines, which have been described as 'the backbone of England', and in the north-west extremities of Scotland. He devised the popular Coast to Coast Walk, from the Irish Sea at St Bees to the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay. The author, Bill Mitchell, is one of a quartet of fell walkers who were personal friends of AW and his wife Betty. She also features in this book, which - far from being a dull treatise on fell walking - enters the quirky, ever fascinating world of its best-known exponent and the wife who played a strong supporting role.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991) became the proverbial legend in his own lifetime. He made the Lakeland fells his own through a series of hand-drawn, hand-written guide books. Over 200 fells became known as 'Wainwrights'. A society has been named after him. His exploits have been recently emulated in the BBC television series "Wainwright Walks". This ground-breaking, richly anecdotal and personal book about Wainwright also recalls his young days in the Lancashire mill town of Blackburn and his fascination - as a lone walker - for wild places in Lancashire, along the Pennines, which have been described as 'the backbone of England', and in the north-west extremities of Scotland. He devised the popular Coast to Coast Walk, from the Irish Sea at St Bees to the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay. The author, Bill Mitchell, is one of a quartet of fell walkers who were personal friends of AW and his wife Betty. She also features in this book, which - far from being a dull treatise on fell walking - enters the quirky, ever fascinating world of its best-known exponent and the wife who played a strong supporting role.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991) became the proverbial legend in his own lifetime. He made the Lakeland fells his own through a series of hand-drawn, hand-written guide books. Over 200 fells became known as 'Wainwrights'. A society has been named after him. His exploits have been recently emulated in the BBC television series "Wainwright Walks". This ground-breaking, richly anecdotal and personal book about Wainwright also recalls his young days in the Lancashire mill town of Blackburn and his fascination - as a lone walker - for wild places in Lancashire, along the Pennines, which have been described as 'the backbone of England', and in the north-west extremities of Scotland. He devised the popular Coast to Coast Walk, from the Irish Sea at St Bees to the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay. The author, Bill Mitchell, is one of a quartet of fell walkers who were personal friends of AW and his wife Betty. She also features in this book, which - far from being a dull treatise on fell walking - enters the quirky, ever fascinating world of its best-known exponent and the wife who played a strong supporting role.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Ilkley
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 248 mm
Width: 190 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-905080-66-3 (9781905080663)
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Schweitzer Classification