Cove

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Afloat Danie Couchman
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Anthony Trollope
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Biological Sciences Grasses
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childhood memories
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cornish coast
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England A Natural History
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Experience Martin Amis
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Haunted & Unexplained Travel
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Hilary Mantel A Memoir of My Former Self
history of cornwall
Ice Diaries Jean McNeil
JMW Turner
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literary memoir
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Plot 29 A Love Affair With Land Alan Jenkins
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raynor winn
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Rocks
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The Bumblebee Flies Anyway Kate Bradbury
The Fragments of My Father Sam Mills
The Hidden Life of Trees
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The Old Ways Robert Macfarlane
The Rising Down
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Tim Hannigan The Granite Kingdom
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781474606936
  • Weight: 352g
  • Dimensions: 144 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Jul 2024
  • Publisher: Orion Publishing Co
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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For over five decades Beth Lynch has been drawn back, over and again, to a rocky spot on the North Cornwall coast. Her earliest memories of the cove are bound up with idyllic family holidays; as she grows older, however, her sense of connection with the place grows deeper and more complicated. This slippery interface of land and sea - a site of sheer edges and ledges, peculiar rock formations and eroding, tumbling slate - becomes her childhood refuge from anxiety and school bullying.

Around the time of her parents' deaths, strange things start to happen in and around the cove, and Lynch is left wondering how well she really knows this minute section of coast that draws her so ineluctably. Is it the cove, or is it her? What secrets does the cove have to share? Is she safer staying away?

Unfolding through a medium of salt and slate, the elemental indifference of Atlantic Cornwall, The Cove is a lyrical meditation on being a revenant, on haunting and being haunted. Through encounters with quarrymen, wartime women and a enigmatic archaeologist - along with JMW Turner, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Anthony Trollope, and Thomas and Emma Hardy - Lynch contemplates what happens when our deepest fears materialise, reflecting on mortality and the nuanced ways in which we take leave of our dead. She explores the profound impacts of change - in ourselves, in places and in the transformative dance between the two.

Beth Lynch grew up in Sussex. She holds a doctorate in seventeenth-century literature, and taught English at Cambridge University before training in garden design. For several years she lived and gardened in Switzerland, the subject of her first book Where the Hornbeam Grows (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2019). She now lives in Northamptonshire.

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