
Rivers Run
An Angler's Journey From Source to Sea
Kevin Parr(Author)
The History Press Ltd
Will be published approx. on 11. June 2026
Book
Hardback
978-1-83705-137-3 (ISBN)
Description
LONGLISTED FOR THE INAUGURAL RICHARD JEFFERIES AWARD FOR NATURE WRITING
'A master of the landscape and a celebration of a life lived with the wild' - Dan Kieran, author of The Idle Traveller
'[Parr] writes beautifully ... gentle, often elegiac ... There is much pleasure to be taken from this book' - Tom Fort, Gamefisher
'Yet, sitting here at the beginning of that journey, I realise there is a different path I must follow. This entails not a simple exploration of a single river, or the fish I might catch from it, but an understanding of what it is that makes someone an angler - what it is that makes me an angler. ... Although I don't always need a rod in my hand to feel as if I belong by the riverside, it was angling that helped open my eyes. And as I sit here, I can hear the river calling me, bubbling up from deep underground, sharing its secrets.'
From childhood memories of an Exmoor stream and of the Itchen during difficult teenage years, to finding solace on the banks of the Kennet and the catharsis of a storm on the Jurassic Coast, Rivers Run is a love letter from Kevin Parr to the rivers and waterways that shaped him. It is a book about fishing. But it's also a book about living, surviving the difficult times and remembering to breathe.
'A moving treatise on the way we deal with the dark things that life throws at us' - BBC Countryfile magazine
'I very much enjoyed this book ... thoughtful and interesting' - Mark Avery, author of Inglorious
'A master of the landscape and a celebration of a life lived with the wild' - Dan Kieran, author of The Idle Traveller
'[Parr] writes beautifully ... gentle, often elegiac ... There is much pleasure to be taken from this book' - Tom Fort, Gamefisher
'Yet, sitting here at the beginning of that journey, I realise there is a different path I must follow. This entails not a simple exploration of a single river, or the fish I might catch from it, but an understanding of what it is that makes someone an angler - what it is that makes me an angler. ... Although I don't always need a rod in my hand to feel as if I belong by the riverside, it was angling that helped open my eyes. And as I sit here, I can hear the river calling me, bubbling up from deep underground, sharing its secrets.'
From childhood memories of an Exmoor stream and of the Itchen during difficult teenage years, to finding solace on the banks of the Kennet and the catharsis of a storm on the Jurassic Coast, Rivers Run is a love letter from Kevin Parr to the rivers and waterways that shaped him. It is a book about fishing. But it's also a book about living, surviving the difficult times and remembering to breathe.
'A moving treatise on the way we deal with the dark things that life throws at us' - BBC Countryfile magazine
'I very much enjoyed this book ... thoughtful and interesting' - Mark Avery, author of Inglorious
Reviews / Votes
'A master of the landscape and a celebration of a life lived with the wild.' -- Dan Kieran, author of <i>The Idle Traveller</i> 'A book that flows like a river' -- Chris Yates, author of <i>Nightwalk</i>More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Stroud
United Kingdom
Illustrations
12 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-83705-137-3 (9781837051373)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
approx. 06/2026
The History Press Ltd
€13.99
Not yet available
Person
KEVIN PARR is a writer, fisherman and naturalist. He is the author of the critically acclaimed Rivers Run (2016), which was longlisted for the inaugural Richard Jefferies Prize for Nature Writing. He is a monthly columnist for BBC Countryfile Magazine and the angling correspondent for The Idlermagazine and has written for the Daily Telegraph and Independent. Kevin lives in West Dorset with his wife and a colony of grass snakes a few strides from his garden gate.