Additional information
| Weight | 0.496 kg |
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| Dimensions | 16 × 23.1 × 2.7 cm |
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£18.00
This book of essays tracks the turning light of the day and seasons, an almanac of the turning times. Beginning in night and winter, it moves to dawn and spring, then noon and summer and finally evening and autumn. Set partly at the author’s home in Wales, the book journeys widely, searching for a dead father in Prague, listening to the Sky-Grandmothers of Mexican myth and staying with the people of West Papua who, when they know they will fall over laughing, lie down first. It asks: what is the real gift of the misunderstood Goddess Nemesis? Why should flowers be prescribed as medicine? What do male zebra finches dream of? Where do the sands of time run fastest, and how is that connected to the age of anxiety?
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| Weight | 0.496 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 16 × 23.1 × 2.7 cm |
| Author | |
| Publisher | |
| Imprint | |
| Cover | |
| Pages | |
| Language | |
| Edition | |
| Dewey | |
| Readership |