This was a worthy tome. It weighs like a thousand pounds, and it is just beautiful. It's a thorough and detailed description of what rewilding is, in the first place, and how and where it is being/could be established everywhere. It includes everything one might need to know, from where to apply for research grants, to links to government projects, to books, programs, and experts for help. Whether one is rewilding a multi thousand hectares (I had to look that up, dratted metric system) nature preserve or a backyard, there are directions for you. I love the whole concept but when they talk about reintroducing wild boars etc. to England's suburbs I kind of thought Not In My Backyard, ha ha. It does not paint a rosy picture - these projects are a whole lot of work and very expensive. I learned a great deal, as well. I did not know that large herbivores enrich the soil (besides the obvious cow pattys). I didn't know their very walking and wallowing and trampling and rootling are essential for the health of the soil. I didn't know that sheep were not always part of the English landscape and are actually extremely damaging to the soil. (sorry James Herriott). Even the vision of England's 'green and pleasant land' is a man made imposition of our own standards of beauty and usefulness on a countryside that resists it all the way. I also always thought of my personal backyard as being pesticide free because I don't use any insecticides or herbicides or anything beyond Miracle Grow, but come to find out my dogs, who receive those flea meds you rub into their skin, are excreting these pesticides, as well as the worm meds they occasionally require, and harming wildlife. The authors heap scorn on these flea meds, but I question whether they remember the old days, where every summer the fleas came and you sprayed them and bathed the animals and none of it did any good at all. Those topical flea meds are a miracle. But I digress (into blasphemy!). I love all the sections on green roofs and vertical forest walls etc. This book exemplifies all the best things about reading non-fiction. I learned some things, my perspective altered and widened some, I grew a little as a human being. Highly recommend whether you live on a large estate, a rippling brook or a suburban backyard. Or a housing project in the inner city! You too can rewild something, even if it is only a window box. Not that there are any window box directions in this book, just a passing reference to starting it with sterile soil. But the blueprint is there - find out which plants are beneficial to the fauna native to your area, and that you want to encourage, and go from there. You might even get an apex predator - like a praying mantis! - to drop by.