Forecast: A Diary of the Lost Seasons
Synopsis
We all talk about them. We all plan our lives by them. We are all obsessed with the outlook ahead. The changing seasons have shaped all of our lives, but what happens when the weather changes beyond recognition?
<p. a="" affair="" and="" are="" art="" author="" britain="" british="" but="" centuries="" changing="" created="" curious="" customs="" discover="" discovered="" established="" far="" faster="" folklore="" has="" have="" he="" in="" inspired="" joe="" literature="" long-standing="" love="" more="" music="" of="" our="" over="" p="" pored="" profoundly="" realise="" recent="" response="" rituals="" s="" seasons="" shute="" spent="" systems="" than="" the="" thing:="" through="" to="" trawled="" unpicking="" we="" weather="" with="" years="">
Daffodils in December, frogspawn in November and summers so hot wildfires rampage across the northern moors. Shute has travelled all over Britain discovering how our seasons are warping, causing havoc with nature and affecting all our lives.
He has trudged through the severe devastation caused by increasingly frequent flooding and visited the Northamptonshire village once dependent on hard frosts for its slate quarrying industry now forced to invest in industrial freezers due to our ever-warming winters. Even the very language we use to describe the weather, he has discovered, is changing in the modern age.
This book aims to bridge the void between our cultural expectation of the seasons and what they are actually doing. To follow the march of the seasons up and down the country and document how their changing patterns affect the natural world and all of our lives. And to discover what happens to centuries of folklore, identity and memory when the very thing they subsist on is changing for good.
</p.>
Publisher information
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- ISBN: 9781472976741
- Number of pages: 272
- Dimensions: 216 x 135 mm
- Weight: 396g
- Languages: English





















