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Cabin Fever: Sheds and Shelters, Huts and Hideaways

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Intriguing and strangely magnetic, cabins fulfil the longing in all of us to indulge again in our childhood reveries of secret hideaways, built of branches and leaves or whatever is to hand; to enter our own private world; to commune with nature and with our own selves. Hidden in the forest, up in the treetops, by the side of still or moving water, down at the end of the garden, the cabin is the most magical of dwellings. Magical, but real too, as these photos from all over the world fishing cabins in Maine; the shed in Wales to which Dylan Thomas retreated to write; hides built by wild duck hunters in France, Finnish saunas, and English beach huts. The search for solitude, the need to throw off the trappings of worldly life, has produced some of the world's most romantic and beguiling buildings. Brought together here, they remind us of that wilder side of human nature which we all recognize and perhaps seek to nourish more. Their mixture of charm, eccentricity and improvisation has truly universal appeal.

112 pages, Hardcover

First published August 1, 1993

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Marie-France Boyer

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
252 reviews
September 26, 2024
They forgot to add "hovels" to the title. Too many hovels for it to be an inspiring book, one that would make you go out and build a hideaway.
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754 reviews14 followers
December 19, 2014
I don't know what this book was trying to do, rambling vaguely about cabins, sheds and outhouses, accompanied by pictures of small structures. I don't feel inspired by looking at pictures of African mud huts, slums/favelas, and Old World peasant shacks mixed in with pictures of luxury getaways in tropical places. I feel confused. The text seemed to be making fun of rich people playing peasant, while also romanticizing real peasants making do in their poverty. Left me empty.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews