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| photo: Lewis Jefferies |
Philip Marsden is the award-winning British author of The Crossing Place: A Journey Among the Armenians, The Bronski House, The Chains of Heaven, and The Spirit-Wrestlers. More recently he has concentrated on subjects closer to home--burrowing into Falmouth's story and the sea's influence for The Levelling Sea, exploring the mythology of landscape through Cornish sites in Rising Ground, and sailing single-handedly up the Irish and Scottish coasts for The Summer Isles. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and is involved in conservation and nature restoration projects. His latest book is Under a Metal Sky: a Journey Through Minerals, Greed and Wonder (Counterpoint Press, November 4, 2025), which explores the wonders and perils of the earth's precious metals.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
Under a Metal Sky examines our relationship with the natural world through rocks and metals--how they have shaped our imaginations for better and worse.
On your nightstand now:
I'm not really a night reader. When I get into bed, I tend to fall asleep pretty swiftly. Reading is too important to confine to the dozy interzone at the end of the day. That said, a quick glance upstairs, and several books lie stacked on the bedside table: short stories by Lorrie Moore and Raymond Carver, poems by Don Paterson and Alice Oswald and--that's where I put it--an instruction booklet for my boat's new chart plotter.
Favorite book when you were a child:
I loved the work of Willard Price. The adventures of Hal and Roger Hunt in Africa, the South Seas, the Arctic, and the Amazon--wherever there were wild creatures and wild landscapes--stirred in me the idea that beyond the school gates lay a thrilling and diverse world.
Your top five authors:
Leo Tolstoy, W.B. Yeats, Isaac Babel, Flann O'Brien, W.G. Sebald (on another day, it could well be an entirely different five).
Book you're an evangelist for:
The poems and prose of Zbigniew Herbert are not as well-known as they should be. His life spanned the decades of the 20th century, and as a native Pole, he was privy to some of its worst horrors. His work is direct and timeless and imbued with that tell-tale elegance that comes only from a searing commitment to truth.
Book that changed your life:
Jack Kerouac's On the Road, read at the right time, when I was 18. I returned to it recently (after foisting it successfully on my 18-year-old son) and rediscovered its energy--but noted too the shadowy place its women occupy, the doomed idealism, the underlying sadness.
Favorite line from a book:
During the writing of Under a Metal Sky I heard the constant echo of John Muir's dictum "When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe," from his My First Summer in the Sierra. The invisible connections between the elements of the natural world are becoming more and more apparent. Muir had an instinctive understanding of those connections--their urgency and beauty.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
So many... that unrepeatable pleasure at reading the first few chapters and finding the texture of the world around you somehow altered and enhanced. A few that spring to mind are Nadezhda Mandelstam's Hope Against Hope, Robert Macfarlane's The Wild Places, and Richard Mabey's Nature Cure, which helped shift the entire focus of my own work from "travel" to "nature."
Your desert island book:
One to save if shipwrecked? That would have to be Tolstoy's War and Peace, not just because of its size but because of the core of its perennial appeal--here is life, here is the still world made animate. That constitutes for me the magic of reading and why Tolstoy's two great novels (the other being Anna Karenina) endure. By creating a living tableau from words, he delivers something close to the flow of our own experience--with all its complexity, its patterns, and paradoxes.