LoveReading Says
Greenery recounts how Tim Dee tries to follow the season and its migratory birds, making remarkable journeys in the Sahara, the Straits of Gibraltar, Sicily, Britain, and finally by the shores of the Arctic Ocean in northern Scandinavia. On each adventure, he is in step with the very best days of the year - the time of song and nests and eggs, of buds and blossoms and leafing.
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Tim Dee Press Reviews
A joyful, poetic hymn to spring...[by] one of our greatest living nature writers... Greenery is an education in looking at, and loving, nature... It is a lesson in how to love the world, in how to look at it, and behind everything there beats a deeper message: that spring cannot exist without winter, that life needs death to define it. -- Alex Preston - Observer
This book has changed the way I think about seasons and migration, humans and birds, time and life. He is a virtuoso handler of sound, knowledge and language. It's a masterpiece. I can't imagine I'll ever stop thinking about it. -- Max Porter A masterpiece of nature writing... No one else in the genre shows anything like Dee's command of prose, tone, voice, pace, depth and phrasing... It's the sort of book that, in its expressive power, its creativity, the richness of its humanity, might make the world worth saving. -- Richard Smyth - New Statesman
Nature Writing , says the classification on the back. Partly true. He's good at that. But leaving it there is a bit like saying that Wordsworth was a gardener and Springsteen is a harmonica player. Dee is one of our best living writers of non-fiction, and Greenery...is perhaps his best book yet... It couldn't be more timely. -- Michael Kerr - Daily Telegraph
A superb nature writer... Miraculous... Ardent, playful, quietly subversive - this is how Dee has always written, but his originality and learning mean he never needs to resort to the devotional swooning that has always plagued writing about the non-human world... It's a deeply affecting [ending]... The effect is like a painter's varnish, deepening shadows but intensifying colours. You go back to the start. -- William Atkins - Guardian
A masterpiece... I can't imagine I'll ever stop thinking about it Max Porter
Fascinating, horizon-expanding, life-enhancing Lucy Jones, author of Losing Eden