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| Coast ~ A Celebration of Britain's Coastal Heritage (BBC Books) | 
enlarge | Author: Christopher Somerville Publisher: BBC Books Category: Book
List Price: £16.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £16.98 (100%)
New (35) from £2.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 17501
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 192 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 7.4 x 0.3
ISBN: 0563522798 Dewey Decimal Number: 914 EAN: 9780563522799 ASIN: 0563522798
Publication Date: July 8, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
A missed opportunity March 30, 2006 50 out of 52 found this review helpful
Like many others, I bought the book because I had thoroughly enjoyed the TV programme. The TV programme covered areas of the coastline which I have enjoyed visting - but they were missing from the book! The pictures, though sometimes excellent photographs, were nowhere near as good as the TV images. The worst aspect for me, however, was the way in which the text (fairly uninspired when compared with the TV commentary) was printed in a sans-serif font over a grey background showing a map of the British coast. It is therefore very difficult to read, and, as pointed out above, not really worth the effort. Why could the BBC not have produced a book in the same league as the one accompanying the British Isles - natural history. A missed opportunity!
I expected more from this book... January 26, 2006 64 out of 66 found this review helpful
Having seen the show on the television I was keen to get the book, what a disappointment it is.There is hardly any text, with a handful of pages devoted to massive stretches of coastline. The pictures aren't that great either and many don't convey a sense of wanting to visit the places being described. The last third of the book is a a useful guide to what can be seen along the various stretches of coastline, what to do and where you can stay. This is very useful. For me, the book would have worked so much better with fewer but better pictures and the Gazetteer section embedded within the book itself. Such a shame.
BREATH-TAKING PHOTOGRAPHY BUT SPARSE IN SUPPORTING TEXT. October 4, 2005 126 out of 135 found this review helpful
There is always a feeling with a film and a book - given a choice, which should one do first, read the book or see the film. Will one spoil the other? The same could be said about a TV series and an accompanying book.Having being glued to each programme in the BBC TV series we have to admit that we were really looking forward to seeing, and reading, the book. Expecting something of a larger 'tome', it was somewhat disappointing to find only 192 pages in mid-size paperback format. The book is divided into two, the first part being dedicated to the 12 coastal regions explored in the TV series. The second part is a handy and clearly laid out reference section indexing places, people, natural history, historic events and facts to help one plan a trip to an individual region. It is undoubtedly a superbly illustrated book, but is sadly lacking in the text to support the breath-taking photography - almost as if the job of getting the book to press has been rushed. As a group with an interest in the North of Scotland, we were really disappointed with this section. The TV programme showed the 'Whaligoe Steps', south of Wick, but there is no mention of this fantastic Caithness landmark in the book. It would be fair to say that the BBC series had a certain mystery attached to it in that each programme might well touch on a childhood memory or a place revisited and I guess this is impossible to carry into the book. As a parting note, I guess we should remind ourselves that we are reviewing the book and not the TV series!
You have to love the coast! September 29, 2005 13 out of 30 found this review helpful
I caught only a few episodes of the TV series and it left me wanting more. Our coast is amazing - there are few things more powerful in destruction and beauty than the sea and our little island's coast is incredibly varied and vulnerable yet strong. I was surprised by how little text there is in this book. The pictures, on the other hand, are plentiful and good quality. The writing is really there to provide information about the pictures, and the photos are really what I want when I buy this sort of book. Although the TV series did perhaps do more to capture the imagination, it has the advantages of moving pictures and of sound. The book is worth having as an addition to your coffee table reading. Certainly anyone who hails from a coastal region will want to read "their bit"!
Accompaniment to the television series August 18, 2005 110 out of 148 found this review helpful
It has to be said that this book is a little bit of a disappointment compared to the joys of the television series. The series (hopefully due out on DVD) offers an epic journey round the British coastline - it's been done before, but not as well. The television series was absolutely first class. The book?Well, it is beautifully illustrated, although you do feel that it would have benefited from being physically bigger, from having a chance to display its images on a grander scale. But it does seem to offer loads of photographs with only limited text to support them. Having seen the television programmes, maybe you want something more substantial, something to flesh out the geology, geography, and history of each of the myriad landscapes and seascapes the camera visits. Perhaps that's the problem. Given the shape of the British Isles, there are few of us who have not had some intimate contact with the sea - if not brought up on the coastline, few live more than 30 miles from it, and virtually everyone will have a beach or stretch of shore they knew as a child or visited regularly at some point. Most of us have some sort of intimacy with the sea and the coastline - watching the television, I could rejoice in revisiting places I have lived (London, Liverpool and Cardiff), but I most wanted to see the Solway Firth of my childhood and youth. There's an element of excitement in following the TV programmes, looking forward to the night when the cameras with get to your special stretch of coast. That element of anticipation isn't present in the book. You can just turn to the right page. And the page doesn't seem very substantial. It's well written and informative. It is an excellent stimulus, an excuse to get out there, to go fossil hunting, to start studying geology, to take an interest in local history, to watch the wildlife, to worry about pollution, to decide you want to paint or photograph. That's the problem! The coast is such a potent stimulus, has so many facets, has so much magnetism, once your enthusiasm has been fired, a whole shelf full of encyclopaedias won't satisfy your curiosity or thirst for knowledge. The television programme is a first class stimulus to action. The book is interesting, informative, and a useful little reference volume to have to hand - nice pictures, convenient text, some useful addresses and contacts at the back. But, of preference, you'd buy the DVD first ... and hopefully get yourself back down to the shoreline with a fresh perspective and renewed interest.
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