Tim Robinson was born in 1935 and brought up in Yorkshire,
England. He studied mathematics at Cambridge and worked as a
teacher and artist in Istanbul, Vienna, and London. In 1972 he
moved to the Aran Islands to write and make maps. He now lives in
Roundstone, County Galway. Among his books are Setting Foot on the
Shores of Connemara and Other Writings (1996), My Time in Space
(2001), Tales and Imaginings (2002), and two volumes of a projected
trilogy, Connemara: Listening to the Wind (2006) and Connemara: The
Last Pool of Darkness (2008). His Folding Landscape Project, which
won a major European Conservation Award in 1987, has produced
radically new maps of the Burren in County Clare, the Aran Islands,
and Connemara.
John Elder lives in Vermont, where he teaches at Middlebury
College and operates a sugar bush with his family. His books
include Reading the Mountains of Home and The Frog Run.
“I do not believe there is another book in the world like it. . . .
Robinson has achieved the impossible: by taking a geographical
reality, describing it so meticulously, and embedding it in a past
of folktales, legends, and history he has thwarted the transience
of at least one small part of the globe.”
—Cees Nooteboom
“One of the most sustained, intensive, and imaginative studies of a
landscape that has ever been carried out. . . . As with all great
landscape works, it is at once territorially specific and utterly
mythic.”
—Robert Macfarlane
"A loving anatomy of the largest of the Aran Islands off the West
Coast of Ireland, in which the point where nature and culture meet
in the island is observed with great beauty and precision." –Colm
Toibin
"Tim Robinson's maps and books honor the landscapes they describe.
As invitations, they irresistibly beckon the archeologist,
botanist, geologist, bird-watcher, folklorist, student of the Irish
language, or just plain tourist." –Chet Raymo.
"Stones of Aran: Pilgrimage and Labyrinth...is a necessity for all
visitors and walkers." --Guardian
"Tim Robinson is an artist and mapmaker and has spent years
charting the coasts of Connemara and the Burren. I came across his
books in a Galway shop. In typical Irish fashion, somebody told me
where he lived and that I should call by. So I did, met Robinson,
bought one of his black-and-white maps and went off walking. His
remarkable book is a fascinating meditation on the geology, spatial
and mythical life of the islands and makes you feel that Robinson
has personally met and considered every boulder in the plane."
–Gwyneth Lewis, The Independent
“The Aran Islands off the west coast of Ireland have captured the
imagination of many artists and writers, from Robert Flaherty's
film Man of Aran to two dazzling books by historian, geographer and
map-maker Tim Robinson–Stones of Aran: Pilgrimage and Stones of
Aran: Labyrinth. With their attention to everything from underlying
geology to botanical minutiae and the long-forgotten genesis of
place names, these books are profound investigations of the
inhabited landscape.” –Architects’ Journal
"An exquisitely detailed portrait of a special landscape, this is a
gem-like addition to the travel genre." –Publishers Weekly
"Robinson takes the reader on a meditative walking tour of
Aran...[he] seeks the essence of an increasingly distant Celtic
past...like a visitor peering through the warped and colored glass
of an ancient church window." –Los Angeles Times
"A kind of travel writing The New Yorker sometimes sponsors: a
virtuosity of gratuitous fact-gathering, a penitential recording of
minutiae, a recitation of information as if it were prayer." –New
York Times
"Looked upon with a tactful, eager, strategic care that is as
tender in its address as an admission of love...Robinson’s Aran
will, inevitably, become part of the general myth. It is a
wonderful achievement." –Seamus Deane, London Review of Books
"The best book ever written by an Englishman about Ireland."
–Independent
"One of the most original, revelatory and exhilarating works of
literature ever produced in Ireland." –Irish Times
"Rapt, encyclopedic volumes...Robinson has done for the west of
Ireland what Ruskin did for Venice, Proust for the voids and vasts
of time." –Telegraph
“Stones of Aran seems to me one of the most significant pieces of
prose, from a literary point of view, written in Ireland in the
past quarter-century.” –J.C.C. Mays, Poetry Ireland
“A rich and a great book. Robinson has evoked the spirit of the
place in its starkness, beauty, and endurance.” –George Mackay
Brown, The Tablet
"Climate and location, flora and fauna, culture, myth and legend,
people, and over it all, the veneer of language and place
name...Tim Robinson achieves this ultimate map in Stones of Aran"
–New Scientist
"Stones of Aran warms cold geology into fervent life. Robinson’s
chosen form is wholly irresistible." –Observer
"One of the most interesting and important books produced in
Ireland in the twentieth century. In prose as layered and rich as
the area he explores, Robinson deals with space in the way Proust
deals with time." –Sean Dunne
“Robinson set out to record in diary form the geology and history,
the language and placenames and folklore of the island.” –The
Washington Post
“Robinson’s language is fastidiously and finely wrought. It draws
the reader on, hypnotically, not merely into Aran’s fantastic
interface of rock and sea, but into a revelation of total
environment.” –Michel Viney, The Irish Times
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