The Waterlands by Stephen Rutt

One of the things I value in life is the importance of slowing things down, and whenever I can, I visit the local Wetlands to surround myself in silence and immerse myself in nature once again.  It’s something so many of us overlook, which is why I was delighted to read Stephen Rutt’s new book, The Waterlands: Follow a Raindrop from Source to Sea, whose premise is following a raindrop from the book’s source in the Lowther Hills of Scotland down to the Firth of Clyde.

Although not a native of Scotland, living in Wales, I feel the majesty of the landscape in The Waterlands; it’s not difficult to smell the greenery, feel the freshest of air and taste the cleanest of waters, which I’ve imbibed many times, and which Stephen Rutt’s lyrical prose exemplifies with the passing of the tides.  

Although primarily, The Waterlands is a book focusing on the natural world, I did feel there was certainly a message to us humans, and our effect upon this beautiful world we live in. By imagining ourselves as a raindrop, we have the ability to influence the world around us, and we can either protect and nurture this world or destroy it.  If we consider ourselves as a raindrop, which travels through the high and low lands, we can see a reflection of ourselves in this, sometimes speeding, sometimes slowing, our raindrop can certainly be taken as a reflection of our daily lives.

The lands in which our raindrop travels, however, is more than a metaphor, and in The Waterlands: Follow a Raindrop from Source to Sea, Stephen Rutt once again steps forward to show how even the seemingly least significant aspect of our planet, a raindrop, has the loudest voice, not just highlighting the importance of the water in our world, but also our symbiotic relationship with the natural world around us, where water gives life to us all.

  • The Waterlands: Follow a Raindrop from Source to Sea by Stephen Rutt is out now, published by Elliott & Thompson (£16.99). To order a copy, go to eandtbooks.com

Tom Stanger
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Editor/writer at The Gothic Revival magazine, former Editor/Writer at The Pilgrim Magazine, curator of the Pontyddim archives, tea drinker, hat wearer and autism advocate. researcher on Gothic Literature & religion, also does book reviews, bad photography, and other bits and bobs

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