Saturday, 18 November 2017

My House of Sky: The Biography of J.A. Baker by Hetty Saunders, Panel Discussion at the London Review Bookshop

 
On Wednesday 15 July 2017, I was privileged to attend a public, ticketed event at the London Review Bookshop. The LRB in Bury Street, within sight of the British Museum is a charming book shop with a huge range of titles and cosy cafĂ©. They run a series of ticketed literary events and I would recommend signing up to their mailing list. My House of Sky written by Hetty Saunders was a biography on J.A. Baker, a very significant figure in English Literature. The book was immediately recognised as a fine piece of literary writing. Robert Macfarlane one of the finest contemporary exponents of nature writing spoke of how Baker influenced many writers with his ability to see the world with a heightened sense of visual acuity (my paraphrasing as I did not make notes of what he actually said). Macfarlane did mention that Baker's writing was 'landscape on acid', a phrase that struck me and resonated with a passage that John Fanshawe read out from one of the earliest editions of The Peregrine. The panel and the discussion was electric. It was moderated by Gareth Evans who handled it masterly and stitched questions from the audience and the comments from the panellists into succinct, intermittent re-caps whilst maintaining momentum.

Baker's writing straddled genres. It was a book that deeply affected birders, environmentalists and followers of literature in equal measure. Mark Cocker in the November 2017 issue of BBC Wildlife magazine writes of Baker's influence and refers to him being credited for setting the gold standard in British nature writing. Mark Conor Jameson in Silent Spring Revisited (Bloomsbury) opens his book with Baker. The involvement of Fanshawe reinforced the link with birders. Fanshawe is a familiar name to birders having co-authored field guides to the Birds of East Africa and another title on the Birds of the Horn of Africa. Whilst reviewing Phil Gregory's Birds of New Guinea, I learnt from the acknowledgements that Fanshawe had been an inspiration for that book.

Baker has remained an elusive figure, with very little known about him. All that changed when Fanshawe was contacted by a relative and received a treasure trove of material which is currently deposited with the University of Sussex. Hetty Saunders nearly did not sign up for a course in writing. But she did and Macfarlane one of the course tutors asked her to look at Baker's material and catalogue it. One thing led to another and just over two years after finishing her course has emerged this biography of one of the most important figures in British literature and the inspiration behind many of the best nature writers in Britain.

Panel discussions have their own dynamic and I was glad to have attended as insights come out of discussion. The fact that Baker's writing is special, is self evident. But I was also struck by Macfarlane and Saunders discussing that Baker was very much aware that he was working on something special and in his manuscript maintained a page count and running count of verbs, nouns, metaphors and so on. This was a numerical measure of the punch he was packing in to his writing by using metaphors to colour the book. The biography carries a foreword by Macfarlane and an afterword by Fanshawe, which reinforces how Baker was both a nature writer, a bird watcher and an environmentalist.

Evans more than once pointed out that Little Toller Books may be little by name and but a giant in stature to have published this book. I was able to chat with Jon Woolcott from the publisher and learn that they at times use crowd funding to fund books and at least twenty of the initial crowd funders were at the event. I am not in the loop on the background to the publishing of the biography but no doubt it is a coup to have beaten the giants of publishing to publish My House of Sky. Little Toller Books have also published authors such as Richard Mabey and Oliver Rackham, whose books are a source of inspiration for me as I labour over a guide to the common trees of Sri Lanka.

For readers who may be interested in more information I have copied below the press release from Little Toller Books.


PRESS RELEASE
My House of Sky - the first biography of writer J. A. Baker
J. A. Baker was the most ordinary of men. He was happily married, lived in a council house in Chelmsford and worked at the Automobile Association offices in Essex. Yet when his book The Peregrine was published 50 years ago, he became one of the greatest nature writers of the twentieth century.

J. A. Baker is revered all around the world today for his intense insight into the landscapes and nature of the British countryside. An extraordinary prose stylist, widely celebrated while he was alive, Baker fell into obscurity after his death 30 years ago. His books were no longer printed. Nobody knew anything about him. Baker became a dim silhouette.

Until now. With The Peregrine enjoying its 50th anniversary this year, the small, independent publisher Little Toller Books is publishing the first biography of J. A. Baker, exploring how he came to become such an important voice for nature and influential writer.

My House of Sky will be published in November 2017. The author, Hetty Saunders, worked with Robert Macfarlane (author of Landmarks, Holloway and The Old Ways) and conservationist John Fanshawe (of BirdLife International) to piece together a fascinating portrait of J. A. Baker. This is the first book that Saunders has written, admitting: "I became a bit obsessed with Baker – he has that effect on people – he captures them and drags them in….every time I thought I’d pinned something down, or learnt it for sure, something new would creep out of the woodwork." She adds: "as I went through his material, journals and archives, I feel I got to know J A Baker, but it’s an incomplete picture and there are still lots of intriguing questions about his life that have remained unanswered, which I think is fitting for a man who was as elusive as the peregrines he followed."

What emerges is a man obsessed with his subject – someone who, for more than a decade before The Peregrine was published, spent all of his spare time out on his bicycle, binoculars slung over one shoulder and a flask of coffee in the pocket of his heavy gabardine coat, recording in meticulous detail every bird he saw in his home county of Essex. His journals and diaries are full of the descriptions of wildlife which ended up in his books. He annotated Ordnance Survey maps with his sightings – examples of these appear in My House of Sky, alongside photographs of the journal. But despite this obsessive behaviour he retained a playful side, as Saunders says "he signed off letters to friends with the words ‘your faithful jester’", was a fan of writers like G K Chesterton, and loved to tell humorous anecdotes. Saunders says his writing is sometimes at odds with this. "It can be quite austere, quite misanthropic, very distant, but the character that came through from the archive was very funny, had lots of warmth, and I felt that this was a story that needed to be told."

The biography also reveals Baker’s lifelong passion for reading, his troubled relationship with his father, and how his terrible experiences of the Blitz as a teenager shaped both his birdwatching skills and his brilliant writing. Like many civilians, Baker was deeply scarred by the Blitz and spent time at a ‘rehabilitation centre’ in Sussex to help overcome his anxiety. Being outside walking, birdwatching or cycling helped him recover and establish himself as a successful writer.

As well as including some of Baker’s previously unpublished poetry My House of Sky also reveals the tantalising prospect of an undiscovered, book - something that Baker had been working on for years
but never published. Although it is not clear whether this was fiction or non-fiction, Little Toller Books hope that this new biography will help encourage people who might have known Baker to come forward if they have any letters, photographs or memories of him. Saunders is optimistic about the prospect of another book. "We know he was writing a third book at the time of his death – there are hints in the notes that Baker left about a new book and letters to admiring readers assuring them of new work to come, but so far it has not been found." The archive was collected from Baker’s family and friends and it remains possible that somewhere, in a loft, or forgotten drawer, is the third book from this elusive genius.

This year is the 50th anniversary of the first publication of The Peregrine, which was one of the first literary works to examine the impacts of pesticides on wild animals and the environment, the effects of which are still being seen today. As Saunders says "Baker was sensitive to the needs of nature in a way that many weren’t in the late 1960s. He was ahead of his time, and his writing style is still so striking, and the content about species extinction so prophetic that it feels almost ahead of our time."

Little Toller Books publication has a foreword by Robert Macfarlane, an afterword by John Fanshawe, and is illustrated throughout by photographs by Christopher Matthews, including images of the journal pages and diaries, of maps annotated by Baker, his binoculars and telescopes for birdwatching, all of which make up a large section in the book. The special edition of the book will include a special print by the stone carver Jo Sweeting, inspired by Baker and his work.

The new book has already been enthusiastically endorsed by the British reading public. Little Toller Books launched a crowd-funding scheme to enable publication of the book and within days achieved the target.

My House of Sky is published on November 1, 2017, by Little Toller Books (RRP £20).




Left: Gareth Evans (Moderator). Right: Hetty Saunders and Robert Macfarlane

Left: Hetty Saunders. Right: John Fanshawe reading from an early edition of The Peregrine.





 

















































































Acknowledgements
My thanks to Johnny and Shalmali Paterson who gave me their tickets when I found the event booked out, weeks ahead.

The Peregrine images below are  (c) James Sellen. They are not from the book. My thanks to James for allowing me to use these to show what a magnificent bird of prey the Peregrine is. Anyone interested in birds and other wildlife and living within a 20 mile radius of St Pauls Cathedral may find it useful to visit the website of the London Natural History Society and to consider membership.







 

Thursday, 16 November 2017

Rare Birds of London

A Summary List of the Rare Birds of London and a pdf of Detailed Records
The ‘London Recording Area’ of the LNHS is surprisingly rich for birds with a total of 370 species recorded to date. Listed below are 196 species of birds for which records have to be submitted to the LNHS Rarities Committee for the inclusion of records in the annual London Bird Report.

A detailed list of records of these 196 species published in the London Bird Report up to 2015 can be downloaded from this link.

To download the rarity list of 196 species listed below as a pdf, click here.






The Rare Birds of London: Summary List


Ducks, Geese and Swans, Anatidae
1.        
Bewick’s Swan  Cygnus columbianus
2.        
Whooper Swan  Cygnus cygnus
3.        
Bean Goose  Anser fabalis
4.        
Pink-footed Goose  Anser brachyrhynchus
5.        
Snow Goose  Anser caerulescens
6.        
Red-breasted Goose  Branta ruficollis
7.        
Brent Goose  Branta bernicla
Sub-species: Pale-bellied Brent Goose B. b. hrota
Sub-species: Black Brant B. b. nigricans
8.        
Barnacle Goose  Branta leucopsis
9.        
American Wigeon  Anas americana
10.    
Green-winged Teal  Anas carolinensis
11.    
Blue-winged Teal  Anas discors
12.    
Ring-necked Duck  Aythya collaris
13.    
Ferruginous Duck  Aythya nyroca
14.    
Lesser Scaup  Aythya affinis
15.    
Common Eider  Somateria mollissima
16.    
King Eider  Somateria spectabilis
17.    
Long-tailed Duck  Clangulahyemalis
18.    
Velvet Scoter  Melanitta fusca
Grouse, Pheasants and Partridges, Phasianidae
19.    
Black Grouse  Tetrao tetrix
Divers, Gaviidae
20.    
Red-throated Diver  Gavia stellata
21.    
Black-throated Diver  Gavia arctica
Grebes, Podicipedidae
22.    
Pied-billed Grebe  Podilymbus podiceps
Petrels and Shearwaters, Procellariidae
23.    
Northern Fulmar  Fulmarus glacialis
24.    
Manx Shearwater  Puffinus puffinus
25.    
Balearic Shearwater  Puffinus mauretanicus
26.    
Barola Shearwater  Puffinus baroli
27.    
European Storm-petrel  Hydrobates pelagicus
28.    
Leach’s Storm-petrel  Oceanodroma leucorhoa
Gannets, Sulidae
29.    
Northern Gannet  Morus bassanus
Herons and Bitterns, Aredeidae
30.    
Little Bittern  Ixobrychus minutus
31.    
Night Heron  Nycticorax nycticorax
32.    
Squacco Heron  Ardeola ralloides
33.    
Cattle Egret  Bubulcus ibis
34.    
Great Egret  Ardea alba
35.    
Purple Heron  Ardea purpurea
Storks, Ciconiidae
36.    
Black Stork  Ciconia nigra
37.    
White Stork  Ciconia ciconia
Ibises and Spoonbills, Threskiornithidae
38.    
Glossy Ibis  Plegadis falcinellus
39.    
Spoonbill  Platalea leucorodia
Osprey, Kites, Hawks and Eagles, Accipitridae
40.    
Honey Buzzard  Pernis apivorus
41.    
Black Kite  Milvus migrans
42.    
White-tailed Eagle  Haliaeetus albicilla
43.    
Hen Harrier  Circus cyaneus
44.    
Montagu’s Harrier  Circus pygargus
45.    
Harrier sp Not given
46.    
Goshawk Accipiter gentilis
47.    
Rough-legged Buzzard  Butoe lagopus
48.    
Golden Eagle  Aquila chrysaetos
49.    
Lesser Kestrel  Falco naumanni
50.    
Red-footed Falcon  Falco vespertinus
51.    
Merlin  Falco columbarius
52.    
Gyr Falcon Falco rusticolus
Rails, Waterhens and Coots, Rallidae
53.    
Spotted Crake  Porzana porzana
54.    
Little Crake  Porzana parva
55.    
Baillon’s Crake  Porzana pusilla
56.    
Corncrake Crex crex
Cranes, Gruidae
57.    
Common Crane  Grus grus
Bustards, Otidae
58.    
Great Bustard  Otis tarda
Stilts and Avocets, Recurvirostridae
59.    
Black-winged Stilt  Himantopus himantopus
Thick-knees, Burhinidae
60.    
Stone-curlew  Burhinus oedicnemus
Coursers and Pratincoles, Glareolidae
61.    
Cream-coloured Courser  Cursorius cursor
62.    
Collared Pratincole  Glareola pratincola
Plovers, Charadriidae
63.    
Killdeer Charadrius vociferus
64.    
Kentish Plover  Charadrius alexandrinus
65.    
Dotterel Charadrius morinellus
66.    
American Golden Plover  Pluvialis dominica
67.    
Pacific Golden Plover  Pluvialis fulva
68.    
Sociable Lapwing  Vanellus gregarius
69.    
White-tailed Lapwing  Vanellus leucurus
Sandpipers and Snipe, Scolopacidae
70.    
Western Sandpiper  Calidris mauri
71.    
Temminck’s Stint  Calidris temminckii
72.    
White-rumped Sandpiper  Calidris fuscicollis
73.    
Baird’s Sandpiper  Calidris bairdii
74.    
Pectoral Sandpiper  Calidris melanotos
75.    
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper  Calidrisacuminata
76.    
Purple Sandpiper  Calidris maritima
77.    
Broad-billed Sandpiper  Limicola falcinellus
78.    
Buff-breasted Sandpiper  Tryngites subruficollis
79.    
Great Snipe  Gallinago media
80.    
Long-billed Dowitcher  Limnodromus scolopaceus
81.    
Spotted Sandpiper  Actitis macularius
82.    
Solitary Sandpiper  Tringa solitaria
83.    
Lesser Yellowlegs  Tringa flavipes
84.    
Marsh Sandpiper  Tringa stagnatilis
85.    
Wilson’s Phalarope  Phalaropus tricolor
86.    
Red-necked Phalarope  Phalaropus lobatus
87.    
Grey Phalarope  Phalaropus fulicarius
Skuas, Stercorariidae
88.    
Pomarine Skua  Stercorarius pomarinus
89.    
Arctic Skua  Stercorarius parasiticus
90.    
Long-tailed Skua  Stercorarius longicaudus
91.    
Great Skua  Stercorarius skua
Gulls and Terns, Laridae
92.    
Sabine’s Gull  Xema sabini
93.    
Bonaparte’s Gull  Chroicocephalus philadelphia
94.    
Laughing Gull  Larus atricilla
95.    
Franklin’s Gull  Larus pipixcan
96.    
Ring-billed Gull  Larus delawarensis
97.    
Ring-billed Gull  Larus delawarensis
98.    
Caspian Gull  Larus cachinnans
99.    
Iceland Gull Larus glaucoides or Glaucous Gull  Larus hyperboreus
100.                        
Iceland Gull  Larus glaucoides
Sub-species: Kumlien’s Gull L. g. kumlieni
101.                        
Slaty-backed Gull  Larus schistisagus
102.                        
Glaucous-winged Gull  Larus glaucescens
103.                        
Glaucous Gull  Larus hyperboreus
104.                        
Sooty Tern  Onychoprion fuscatus
105.                        
Bridled Tern  Onychoprion anaethetus
106.                        
Gull-billed Tern  Gelochelidon nilotica
107.                        
Caspian Tern  Hydroprogne caspia
108.                        
Whiskered Tern  Chlidonias hybrida
109.                        
White-winged Black Tern  Chlidonias leucopterus
110.                        
Roseate Tern  Sterna dougallii
Auks, Alcidae
111.                        
Common Guillemot  Uria aalge
112.                        
Razorbill  Alca torda
113.                        
Black Guillemot  Cepphus grylle
114.                        
Little Auk  Alle alle
115.                        
Puffin Fratercula arctica
Sandgrouse, Pteroclidae
116.                        
Pallas’s Sandgrouse  Syrrhaptes paradoxus
 
Cuckoos, Cuculidae
117.                        
Yellow-billed Cuckoo  Coccyzus americanus
Owls, Strigidae
118.                        
Scops Owl  Otus scops
119.                        
Snowy Owl  Bubo scandiacus
120.                        
Tengmalm’s Owl  Aegolius funereus
Nightjars, Caprimulgidae
121.                        
European Nightjar  Caprimulgus europaeus
122.                        
Common Nighthawk  Chordeiles minor
Swifts, Apodidae
123.                        
Alpine Swift  Apus melba
Bee-eaters, Meropidae
124.                        
European Bee-eater  Merops apiaster
Rollers, Coraciidae
125.                        
European Roller  Coracias garrulus
Hoopoes, Upupidae
126.                        
Hoopoe Upupa epops
Woodpeckers, Picidae
127.                        
Wryneck Jynx torquilla
Larks, Alaudidae
128.                        
Short-toed Lark  Calandrella brachydactyla
129.                        
Crested Lark  Galerida cristata
130.                        
Shore Lark Eremophila alpestris
Swallows and Martins, Hirundinidae
131.                        
Red-rumped Swallow  Cecropis daurica
Wagtails and Pipits, Motacillidae
132.                        
Richard’s Pipit  Anthus richardi
133.                        
Tawny Pipit  Anthus campestris
134.                        
Olive-backed Pipit  Anthus hodgsoni
135.                        
Red-throated Pipit  Anthus cervinus
136.                        
Buff-bellied Pipit  Anthus rubescens
137.                        
Yellow Wagtail  Motacilla flava
Sub-species: Blue-headed Wagtail  M. f. flava
138.                        
Citrine Wagtail  Motacilla citreola
139.                        
Pied Wagtail  Motacilla alba
Sub-species: White Wagtail  M. a. alba
Dippers, Cinclidae
140.                        
Dipper Cincluscinclus
Accentors, Prunellidae
141.                        
Alpine Accentor  Prunella collaris
Chats and Flycatchers, Muscicapidae
142.                        
Bluethroat Luscinia svecica
143.                        
Black-eared Wheatear  Oenanthe hispanica
144.                        
Desert Wheatear  Oenanthe deserti
145.                        
Grey-cheeked Thrush  Catharus minimus
146.                        
Hermit Thrush  Catharus guttatus
147.                        
Naumann’s Thrush  Turdus naumanni
148.                        
American Robin  Turdus migratorius
149.                        
Red-breasted Flycatcher  Ficedula parva
Warblers, Sylviidae
150.                        
Savi’s Warbler  Locustella luscinioides
151.                        
Aquatic Warbler  Acrocephalus paludicola
152.                        
Paddyfield Warbler  Acrocephalus agricola
153.                        
Blyth’s Reed Warbler  Acrocephalus dumetorum
154.                        
Marsh Warbler  Acrocephalus palustris
155.                        
Icterine Warbler  Hippolais icterina
156.                        
Melodious Warbler  Hippolais polyglotta
157.                        
Barred Warbler  Sylvia nisoria
158.                        
Subalpine Warbler  Sylvia cantillans
159.                        
Sardinian Warbler  Sylvia melanocephala
160.                        
Eastern Crowned Warbler  Phylloscopus coronatus
161.                        
Pallas’s Warbler  Phylloscopusproregulus
162.                        
Yellow-browed Warbler  Phylloscopus inornatus
163.                        
Hume’s Warbler  Phylloscopus humei
164.                        
Radde’s Warbler  Phylloscopus schwarzi
165.                        
Dusky Warbler  Phylloscopus fuscatus
166.                        
Common Chiffchaff  Phylloscopus collybita
Sub-species: Siberian Chiffchaff  P. c. tristis
167.                        
Iberian Chiffchaff  Phylloscopus ibericus
Tits, Paridae
168.                        
Crested Tit  Lophophanes cristatus
169.                        
Willow Tit  Poecile palustris
Penduline Tits, Remizidae
170.                        
Penduline Tit  Remiz pendulinus
Treecreepers, Serthiidae
171.                        
Short-toed Treecreeper  Certhia brachydactyla
Orioles, Oriolidae
172.                        
Golden Oriole  Oriolus oriolus
Shrikes, Laniidae
173.                        
Brown Shrike  Lanius cristatus
174.                        
Isabelline Shrike  Lanius isabellinus
175.                        
Red-backed Shrike  Lanius collurio
176.                        
Lesser Grey Shrike  Lanius minor
177.                        
Great Grey Shrike  Lanius excubitor
178.                        
Woodchat Shrike  Lanius senator
Crows and Jays, Corvidae
179.                        
Nutcracker Nucifragacaryoccatactes
180.                        
Hooded Crow  Corvus cornix
Starlings, Sturnidae
181.                        
Rose-coloured Starling  Sturnus roseus
Finches, Fringilidae
182.                        
European Serin  Serinus serinus
183.                        
Twite Carduelis flavirostris
184.                        
Arctic Redpoll  Carduelis hornemanni
185.                        
Two-barred Crossbill  Loxia leucoptera
186.                        
Parrot Crossbill  Loxia pytyopsittacus
187.                        
Common Rosefinch  Carpodacus erythrinus
188.                        
Pine Grosbeak  Pinicola enucleator
Buntings, Emberizidae
189.                        
Lapland Bunting  Calcarius lapponicus
190.                        
Snow Bunting  Plectrophenax nivalis
191.                        
Pine Bunting  Emberiza leucocephalos
192.                        
Cirl Bunting  Emberiza cirlus
193.                        
Ortolan Bunting  Emberiza hortulana
194.                        
Rustic Bunting  Emberiza rustica
195.                        
Little Bunting  Emberiza pusilla
196.                        
Black-headed Bunting  Emberiza melanocephala




 
Picture Credits
Brown Shrike, Staines Moor 17 December 2009 (c) Andrew Moon
Nightjar, Teddington 10 June 2006 (c) Andrew Moon
Little Bittern, Stocker's Lake 16 June 2012 (c) Andrew Moon


Notes
This page in the blog is a test page. For details of the London Bird Club visit the London Natural History Society.