Adventurous Pub Walks in Dorset

Adventurous Pub Walks in Dorset

Author: Anne-Marie Edwards

Publisher: Adventurous Pub Walks

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13: 9781853067846

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Features twenty circular walks varying in length between 7 and 12 miles, and based on good local pubs. This book includes routes near Symondsbury, Osmington Mills, Gussage All Saints, Studland and Serborne, along with maps and photographs.


Pub Walks Along the Dorset Coast Path

Pub Walks Along the Dorset Coast Path

Author: Anne-Marie Edwards

Publisher: Countryside Books (GB)

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 96

ISBN-13: 9781853064647

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A collection of twenty circular walks based on the Dorset Coast Path, including routes at Lyme Regis, Abbotsbury, Lulworth and Studland, along with maps and photographs.


Pub Walks in Underhill Country

Pub Walks in Underhill Country

Author: Nat Segnit

Publisher: Penguin UK

Published: 2011-02-03

Total Pages: 388

ISBN-13: 014193302X

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Pub Walks in Underhill Country by Nat Segnit is a cunning, hilarious and heartbreaking novel that takes the form of a guide for walkers but is really a whole lot more . . . 'Start by turning right out of the main entrance of Malvern Link railway station . . .' So begins Graham Underhill's guide to rambling in the West Midlands. But it is not many yards before Graham has gone completely off track, all but abandoning the route ahead to exult in his love for his beautiful if headstrong wife Sunita. Along the way Graham treats us to his intemperate views on mountain bikers, litter louts, landscape photographers, and the Highways Agency, who are intent on building a bypass through his home. At least he has Sunita. Or does he? With each walk it becomes clearer that the paths of Underhill Country lead into treacherous terrain. 'If Vladimir Nabokov had written episodes of The Archers (with a little script advice from W G Sebald), then he might just have struck a note that chimed with the peculiar music of this beguiling first novel' Independent 'A metafictional escapade . . . has both Nabokov and Alan Partridge as its forebears' Daily Telegraph 'Has echoes of Mike Leigh's best films and Paul Torday's smash debut, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen' Daily Mail Nat Segnit lives in London. His journalism and stories have appeared in several national newspapers, and his play, Dolphin Therapy, and two co-written comedy series, Strangers on Trains and Beautiful Dreamers, were broadcast on Radio 4. Pub Walks in Underhill Country is his first novel.