If Lost Start Here is a guide for the anxious, curious, lonely and lost. Featuring everyday places and at-home prompts designed to help you live a life that feels good.
If Lost Start Here is a guide for the anxious, curious, lonely and lost. Featuring everyday places and at-home prompts designed to help you live a life that feels good.
WINTERING: THE POWER OF REST AND RETREAT IN DIFFICULT TIMES
If you needed a reading cure to get you through the winter months, this would be it. Katherine May’s beautifully written book remakes the dark days into times of essential pause and restoration.
THE NATURE REMEDY: A RESTORATIVE GUIDE TO THE NATURAL WORLD
Curator of trees at Thorp Perrow, Faith Douglas brings us a compendium of remedies from across the natural world. Like understanding the night skies, applying color therapy to the natural landscape, and knowing how to forest bathe (recommended dosage of two hours each week). For when you don’t know how to access nature, but you know you need to.
THE WELL GARDENED MIND: REDISCOVERING NATURE IN THE MODERN WORLD
This book gives us the science behind the instinct that says gardening in particular, and being in nature more widely, is good for us. Psychiatrist and psychotherapist Sue Stuart-Smith takes us through all aspects of why gardening matters in a moment when anxiety and depression are increasing and we find ourselves ever more separate from the natural world.
REWILD YOURSELF: 23 SPELLBINDING WAYS TO MAKE NATURE MORE VISIBLE
Simon Barnes opens the world to us in this beguiling book of ‘personal rewilding’. With simple, though magical, techniques, he makes the wild visible, evoking our inherent connection with nature; for less than 1 percent of our existence we have been civilized, and the wild is deep in our ancestral souls and genetic make-ups.
REWILD YOUR LIFE: 52 WAYS TO RECONNECT WITH NATURE
Know you need to find your way back to nature, but have no idea how to do it? Born of a simple New Year’s wish to see more sunsets, in this book outdoor writer Sarah Stirling gives you 52 ideas to return you back to the wild.
FFOREST: BEING, DOING & MAKING IN NATURE
This book explains the philosophy of one of our favourite places to lose ourselves, fforest, with founder Sian Tucker taking us through all the ways we can reconnect with nature, wherever we are. Illustrated with details from fforest, Tucker teaches the skills and knowledge that we once would have known that we have since lost.
THE SALT PATH
When you think all hope is lost, pick up The Salt Path (or the similarly healing follow-up memoir The Wild Silence). Raynor Winn lost her family home and received a life-threatening diagnosis for her beloved husband Moth within days of each other. Now homeless and heartbroken, the couple finds a way forwards walking the 630-mile South West Coast Path. The breathtaking scenery, land underfoot, and shifting weather becomes the source of their healing and maybe even a way back.
H IS FOR HAWK
We were enthralled reading this memoir; Macdonald wrestles with the abject grief she feels after the sudden loss of her father by training a goshawk. A book to look to for coping with loss, reassuring us that it’s ok to find ourselves again, in whatever seemingly idiosyncratic ways feel right at the time.
WILD AT HEART: AMERICA'S TURBULENT RELATIONSHIP WITH NATURE, FROM EXPLORATION TO REDEMPTION
Wild at Heart is a deep-dive into ecological history. It’s an ambitious narrative tracking our shifting relationship with the natural world from indigenous culture’s respect for the land to colonialists fear of it, the mass pollution and sickness that came with industrialization, and the awakening of the environmental movement. Outwater makes abundantly clear the interdependence of humanity and nature as the one consistent thread throughout it all.
SHE EXPLORES
Gale Straub starts this beautifully illustrated collection with a question: “Who do you picture when you think of an outdoorswoman.” This book crafts a nuanced idea of who women are — and who they can be — as they live life outdoors: enthusiasts, creatives, professionals, nomads, transplants, and advocates. This collection of stories shows us the way we can be.