Trelawny’s Cornwall

Regular price €17.50
A01=Petroc Trelawny
Author_Petroc Trelawny
bbc proms
BBC Radio 3
Birdwatching & Other Outdoor Pursuits
Birdwatching & Other Outdoor Pursuits hiking & camping
Birdwatching & Other Outdoor Pursuits orienteering
Birdwatching & Other Outdoor Pursuits Walking
camping
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTP
Category=NKL
classic fm
coast
Cornish
Cornish pasty
cream tea
devon
dorset
eden project
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Falmouth
guide to cornwall
helston
helston school
Hiking & Trekking
history of cornwall
Hobbies & Games Fishing
holiday read
isles of Scilly
lands end
lizard peninsula
mousehole
mullion
nature writing
Newquay
Penzance
Plymouth
Poldark
porthleven
rambling
sailing
salt path
sea
Sports
st ives
staycation
the lizard
travel
walking
wild swimming

Product details

  • ISBN 9781474625104
  • Weight: 288g
  • Dimensions: 128 x 196mm
  • Publication Date: 29 May 2025
  • Publisher: Orion Publishing Co
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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It would be hard to think of a more thoroughly Cornish name than Petroc Trelawny. His first name is shared with one of Cornwall's most celebrated saints, his second is the name of its unofficial national anthem. But when a stranger challenges the Radio 3 presenter on his ancestry, he is inspired to return to the lands of his boyhood to rediscover the place where he grew up, and attempt to confirm if he still belongs there.

Part history, part memoir, this is a deeply felt exploration of Cornwall - past, present and future. Petroc embarks on a slow journey that sees him visit old mine workings, ancient churches, sites where new technology was forged, and places where poets, musicians, architects and film makers have worked to shape Cornwall's cultural identity. He explores the Tamar, the river that marks out the Cornish frontier, and holds a finger up to winds of change, exploring the collapse of Methodism, the decline of the Cornish language, and the complex , sometimes lucrative, sometimes destructive, relationship with tourism.

As he travels by road, rail and foot, he conjures marvellously vivid figures and scenes from memory, telling the stories of a loving family full of mysteries and a landscape still redolent of 'Cornish otherness'.

Petroc Trelawny grew up on the Lizard Peninsula in the far south of Cornwall. He presents Breakfast on BBC Radio 3. He was part of the commentary team for BBC Television's coverage of the Coronation of King Charles III and the funeral of Her Majesty The Queen and has presented BBC Proms on radio and television for more than two decades.