THE NO. 2 SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK WINNER OF THE 2020 INDIE BOOK AWARD FOR NON-FICTION
Lara Maiklem moved from her family's farm to London in the 1990s and has been mudlarking along the River Thames for fifteen years. She now lives with her family on the Kent coast within easy reach of the river, which she visits as regularly as the tides permit. In 2022, she was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. This is her first book. Twitter: @LondonMudlark / Instagram: @london.mudlark
This is a quirky and delightful read, wonderfully evocative of
London’s gloopy, ghost-haunted river
*Daily Mail*
A treasure. One of the best books I’ve read in years
*Tracy Borman*
Reveals to us the fascinating and poignant micro-world of London's
history
*Hallie Rubenhold*
Enchanting. It made even a capsized cynic like me feel more
sentimental about the Thames. In fact, I am quite tempted to join
Maiklem on the riverbed looking for treasure
*Sunday Times*
Mudlarks are river scavengers, but Lara Maiklem is more like a time
traveller. Her prose has none of the self-conscious sensibility
that defines contemporary nature writing; her thoughtful sentences
read as though she were talking to herself. There is a great deal
to learn from these pages, not least the insight that finding lost
things is the best way of losing yourself. It is, above all, her
wisdom that makes Lara Maiklem such restful company
*Guardian*
Maiklem persists, in this weirdly engaging book, in seeking out a
curious beauty. Maiklem’s description of the fog is worthy of
Dickens or Joseph Conrad. Maiklem pungently evokes the broken
bridges, slippery river stairs, causeways, jetties and boatyards.
No one has looked at these odd corners since Sherlock Holmes
*Sunday Telegraph*
Maiklem’s storytelling shines. Her imagined histories for her
special finds read like waterborne fairy stories, a hard kernel of
truth clothed in mythical finery. Reading it, I felt like I was
down on the foreshore myself, sifting through the pages for
titbits
*Daily Telegraph*
A lovely, lyrical, gently meandering book, filled with fascinating
diversions and detail
*Literary Review*
Maiklem's enthusiasm is infectious, and her reimagining of the
lives of those who parted with these items is an illuminated
joy
*i*
Whoever buys it is blessed. I love the fact that [Maiklem] makes
herself the centre of this huge, timeless, endless story that
reaches from the distant past and flows past all our
consciousnesses out to a place far beyond the reach of the estuary.
Lara is such a natural writer; every page just tingles with her
imagination. It is a love letter to life itself
*Ian Mortimer*
Maiklem has an infectious love of linking the present with the
past. It is historic detail like this that makes Mudlarking much
more than just a lengthy list of discarded bric-a-brac. Lara is a
romantic, motivated primarily by the human stories behind the
objects. Curiosity may kill the cat, but it is the making of many
an author. And Lara has it in spades
*Daily Mail*
Maiklem augments the Thamesian tally, summoning old Londoners out
of silty suspension from a discarded Victoria Cross or a pot-lid.
There are other mudlarking books, but this one offers engaging
insight into an amphibian ambience of strongly marked characters,
semi-secret exploits and outlandish theories. Maiklem is not alone
in resorting to the river for salvation as much as salvage
*Spectator*
A beautifully written memoir of one woman’s relationship with the
sacred Thames and the ghosts of its past. Lara Maiklem’s book on
mudlarking is as deep and as rich as the Thames and its treasures.
Fascinating
*Stanley Tucci*
A hybrid of personal memoir, London history and literary cabinet of
curiosities
*Telegraph*
Maiklem’s knowledge and skill are evident and unarguable. [She]
leaves the door open for the rest of us: with a bit of luck and
patience you too, she suggests, could spot something interesting on
the foreshore, ask around, take it to a museum and end up owning a
little bit of history. What a thrill
*Caught by the River*
[An] enthralling and evocative history of London and its people
*Bookseller*
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