Cover Image: Diagonal Walking

Diagonal Walking

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Inspired me to book a UK holiday this year. Easy reading, you can dip in and dip out. Fascinating to read the dialogue with he people he meets along the way. Just need another lovely summer this year!

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Should you enjoy detailed travel accounts (the kind where the writer relates his interactions with nearly everyone met along the way) or discussions involving why a particular society is they way it is, you may enjoy this gentleman's account of his long distance walk across a huge swath of England.

Per his introduction, he was celebrating his sixtieth birthday by walking and speaking with as many people as possible about Bretix and how they felt their life/town/village was doing compared to years preceding. The author offers many of his personal thoughts/viewpoints on how government policies, politicians, and the economy have changed citizens lives, often for the worst. You'll learn about the places he visits in a fair amount of detail as well as how (unexpectedly) much time he discovered he had to spend promoting his walk via social media took.

Overall, though not difficult to read, one does have to pay attention. This isn't a mindless trip accounting - the author obviously put a LOT of thought into this book.

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A walking book a thoughtful engaging look at the people he met on the way.Fascinating and engaging to find out what people in England think about Brexit life in general.In the grand tradition of Bill Bryson a travel book that also involves modern technology such as Instagram that was fun following. A really enjoyable travel book.#netgalley # matador
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One of my favourite book genres is the walking book, whether it is the insightful comedy of Bill Bryson, the imagery of Robert Macfarlane, the psychogeography of Iain Sinclair or the classicism and romanticism of Patrick Leigh Fermour. From these books you not only usually receive a geographical and topographical narrative but gain a deeper understanding of the society and changes of the land that the writer is traversing through. The object of Nick Corble's 39 day diagonal walk across England was not only to chronicle what he saw but to gain an appreciation and obtain a snapshot of his country post the Brexit vote.

Using only public footpaths he undertakes the long distance walk from the Lancashire to Kent coast during the hot summer of 2018. This is not a book about Brexit, indeed the people he engaged in conversation had often a marked reluctance to talk about it seeing it rather as an abstract concept. It is though always in the background an ever present but ill defined phenomena lacking a fully formed meaning. I have recently read two other walking books that in part cover the route undertaken here and from them all one gets a sense of the sheer magnitude of the deindustrialisation that has effected large areas of the country over the recent past. Factories are now either rotting away or have been replaced by warehouse distribution centres. Tourists have replaced dockers and miners and the only industry left is that of heritage.

Nick Corble is a genial and humorous guide and there are many amusing stories as he struggles against the neglect (much of it deliberate) that is encountered trying to follow what should be public rights of way. Staffordshire heads the list for not looking after its footpaths and byeways. Walking through cities, towns, villages and open country the writer has produced an insightful commentary on how well various communities are doing which range from the just about coping to the just given up. I certainly thoroughly enjoyed the book and hope that Nick will consider further journeys of exploration in the future.

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This is a book for a particular reader, and I am that reader. I enjoy travelling and books like those written by Bill Bryson and Terry Darlington. In my opinion, I would have been just as happy if the book were written just about the journey without the political commentary about Brexit. However, those readers in the UK and indeed the EU would most likely find it interesting.
I love that this author fully embraced social media to get the word out about his journey. I thoroughly enjoyed scrolling through the Instagram feed as I read along.
I recommend this book to people who like travel writing or stories in the style of Bill Bryson or Terry Darlington.

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I liked the way this one is written. It kept me engaged and totally interested in England and the way things are going there. If it sounds interesting pick it up!

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