I wrote a review of this for a magazine - here's what I said:
Following on from the success of The Natural Navigator, which was chosen as one of the National Trust’s ‘Outdoors Books of the Year’ in 2011, Tristan Gooley returns with a highly readable and engaging work devoted to the temporarily mislaid art of exploration.
He starts by setting out exactly what an explorer is and is not, and that’s important because he is attempting to reclaim the job title from adventurers – as Churchill memorably referred to Ernest Shackleton. For Gooley, heroic courage and derring-do will not do at all; explorers explore the world, rather than conquer it as a statement of man’s power over nature. Exploration starts in the act of observation and, once we understand that, we can perhaps begin by paying close attention to what is close to home.
As if to reinforce how little most of us notice of our immediate surroundings, the book follows Gooley’s journey around his local patch of West Sussex as he perceives and draws on the most intricate details to illustrate points about plants, animals, geology, the weather and so on. Each of the thirty or so chapters begins with an eloquent, short passage of often intense sensory input which sets the scene as he reads the landscape in much the same way that a parfumier describes a scent. As each chapter unfolds, we learn more of exploration not only through the author, but also through insight afforded by Gooley’s cast of explorers – Darwin, von Humboldt, Gilbert White, Dorothy Wordsworth, amongst others – all of which serve as explorations of the act of exploration itself.
Gooley, it turns out, is describing and expanding upon a journey that took him four hours. It’s an inspiring account but also a turning point – perhaps a classic in years to come – because its simple and beautiful aim is to help you recognise what your senses are telling you. It’s also an object lesson in how to frame a call to action, because this is a book you can’t put down until you absolutely have to get out and start seeing the world as you should. And that’s when the adventure really begins.