Catrina Davies was born in Snowdonia and grew up around Land's End, Cornwall. She has worked as a DJ, gardener, circus cellist, cleaner, TEFL teacher, dog walker, flower-picker, builder and waitress. She has also released two records. Her first book Fearless is a memoir about busking from Norway to Portugal. riverrun published Homesick in 2019 and it went on to be longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize, Once Upon a Raven's Nest is her third book.
This is a rich, beautiful and deeply moving book. I read it in one
sitting, then was sorry that I had not drawn it out for longer, as
I enjoyed it so much.
*George Monbiot*
From the wonderfully evocative title to the heart-rending yet
spirit-lifting conclusion, Catrina examines, with great empathic
power, how colossal forces work on the individual. In one man, we
are shown vast epochal change; in him, we see the concerns and
defiance and activities that were once considered as solely the
province of gods. A brilliant and necessary book.
*Niall Griffiths*
Stunning. Urgent. Unforgettable. Through this complex and loving
portrait of a rural working man, Catrina Davies gives voice to all
that has been lost and damaged in his lifetime, ours. She is a true
successor to John Berger in writing with love and anger on behalf
of threatened species and communities.
*Tanya Shadrick, author of The Cure for Sleep*
Once Upon a Raven's Nest is a genuinely captivating tale of
rural-lore - told through the thrilling narrative of one man's
life; a good ol' country boy, a right character whose scraps and
scrapes litter the pages. Chainsaws and tractors and torn love
affairs fill the book, as Tommy's story is laid bare in a series of
episodes and fractured snapshots carefully scattered within a
timescale of environmental decline. There is a tough, brutal beauty
here in Davies' depiction of the ways of the British countryside
but love, and delight and the best of humanity, too.
*James Canton*
Original and powerful, I loved this book. This is a beautiful,
powerful and truly original book which is nature writing at it's
truest and finest.
*Clover Stroud*
This has the unmistakable smell of a classic. Davies has restored
my flagging faith in the ability of language to tell the
unvarnished truth. Here's a book worthy of Exmoor ravens and rivers
and of the big, bold, dignified story it tells. I have no higher
praise.
*Charles Foster, author of Cry of the Wild, Being a Human and Being
a Beast*
There is a raw energy here which is very appealing. Exmoor very
rough and very ready. Pulses with life at every turn. Expertly
told, the fragmentary collision Of lives and a planet, deer,
salmon, trees, tractors and a chainsaw or two. Exmoor verbatim as
you never seen it before. Outdoors means out doors.
*James Crowden*
Superb . . . listen to Tommy, recorded or scripted by Davies, and
something gripping and honest emerges . . . a vivid picture of
nature in the raw.
*Spectator*
It is a beguiling, earthy tale of a lost world, one rarely examined
in print. Hedley's outlandish yarns about brawling and risk-taking
mix with stories that reveal his complex relationship with
nature.
*Independent (April Book of the Month)*
A tremendous book, both gritty and lyrical and often darkly
funny
*Daily Mail*
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