Book Launch: Potholes and Pavements by Laura Laker

Last week we hosted the launch of Laura Laker’s debut book Potholes and Pavements: A Bumpy Ride On Britain’s National Cycle Network. This is a unique journey around the UK’s National Cycle Network and one journalist’s quest to investigate the state of our country’s cycling.

What if we were less reliant on our cars? What if there were safe cycling paths to take us places instead? What if those paths led to the next town, the next village and the countryside beyond?

This was the dream of a group of Bristolian idealists in the 1970s when they founded Britain’s National Cycle Network, which now runs to nearly 13,000 miles across the country. Journalist Laura Laker sets off on an odyssey around the UK to see where the NCN began, and where it is now.

What has gone right – and wrong – with this piece of national infrastructure? Why is it run by a charity whose CEO once admitted ‘we’ve had enough of it being crap, we need to fix it’? Laura lifts the lid on this maddening, patchy, and at times dangerous network, and the similarly precarious politics and financing that make it what it is.

She discovers beauty, friendship and adventure along the way, from the Cairngorms to Cornwall, from the Pennines to the South Wales coast. On her mission to pin down what the NCN is and what it means to those who use it, she also meets up with high-profile travelling companions, including Chris Boardman and Ned Boulting.

In a country where 71% of trips are less than five miles, two thirds of Britons say they want to cycle more and doing so could help our climate, health and wellbeing. Laura is on a mission to see if we can make that dream a reality.

Potholes and Pavements: A Bumpy Ride On Britain’s National Cycle Network. is available now for £16.99. All our copies are signed by the author while stocks last.

Join Laura Laker as she talks about her book at Stanfords London on the 21st May and at Stanfords Bristol on 23rd May. See our events page for tickets and more details.

10 Maps we are talking about

Get your cartographic fix right here with these 10 maps that have caught our attention recently:

Stanford’s Map of Italy (1859)

£19.99

We are celebrating this map’s 165th birthday. It was originally published on 2nd May 1859 by Edward Stanford.


The map catches the country in an interesting stage of its history, just before the unification, and still shows the individual states: the Kingdom of Piedmont – Sardinia, the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the Papal States, etc, all in different colours. Hachures are used to show the spine of the Apennines and other mountainous regions.


Interesting insets show enlargements of the environs of Venice, Genoa and Naples with Vesuvius, and another panel presents the whole of the Austro-Hungarian Empire which then still included Lombardy and north-eastern Italy.

This reproduction is Print on Demand so is available in other sizes.

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Extract: Infinite Life by Jules Howard

In Infinite Life: Revolutionary Story of Eggs, Evolution and Life on Earth, zoology correspondent Jules Howard takes the reader on a mind-bending journey from the churning coastlines of the Cambrian Period and Carboniferous coal forests, where insects were stirring, to the end of the age of dinosaurs when live-birthing mammals began their modern rise to power. Eggs would evolve from out of the sea; be set by animals into soils, sands, canyons and mudflats; be dropped in nests wrapped in silk; hung in stick nests in trees, covered in crystallised shells or secured by placentas.

Here is an extract:

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Author Talk: Groundbreakers: The Return Of Britain’s Wild Boar

A big thank you to everyone who came to Chantal Lyons’ talk here last week. Her book Groundbreakers explores the reintroduction of wild boar back in Britain after centuries of absence and asks what does this mean for us – and them?

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Author Talk: The Beacon Bike by Ed Peppitt

Last week we hosted an event with Ed Peppitt where he spoke about his new book The Beacon Bike: Around England and Wales in 327 Lighthouses.

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Children’s Book of the Month: Children of the World

Our Children’s Book of the Month is Children of the World by Nicola Edwards, illustrated by Andrea Stegmaier.

Discover what daily life is like for children across the world as we explore everything from food to family, and learn how to greet new friends in lots of different languages.

See where it’s polite to slurp your food and bad manners to give the thumbs up, and find out where you might travel to school by cable car or sleep on an oven bed at night!

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Book of the Month: A History of the World in 47 Borders

Our Book of the Month for May is A History of the World in 47 Borders: The Stories Behind the Lines on Our Maps by Jonn Elledge.

People have been drawing lines on maps for as long as there have been maps to draw on. Sometimes rooted in physical geography, sometimes entirely arbitrary, these lines might often have looked very different if a war or treaty or the decisions of a handful of tired Europeans had gone a different way. By telling the stories of these borders, we can learn a lot about how political identities are shaped, why the world looks the way it does – and about the scale of human folly.

From the Roman attempts to define the boundaries of civilisation, to the secret British-French agreement to carve up the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, to the reason why landlocked Bolivia still maintains a navy, this is a fascinating, witty and surprising look at the history of the world told through its borders.

‘Fascinating and hugely entertaining’ – Marina Hyde

‘By turns surprising, funny, bleak, ridiculous, or all four of those at once’ – Gideon Defoe.

A History of the World in 47 Borders is available now for £25. Our copies are signed by the author while stocks last.

Map of the Month: London Greenground Map

Our Map of the Month for May is the London Greenground Map by graphic designer and map maker Helen Ilus.

Exclusive to Stanfords this Spring/ Summer.

The London Greenground Map is the largest greenground map to date – connecting 1,200 green spaces with 20 inspirational lines for exploring the London-wide network of parks, rivers, nature reserves, woods and wetlands. Covering all London boroughs so that every neighbourhood can find nature on their doorstep.

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Three Enchanting Islands to visit in the Mediterranean

Travel with Laura Coffey through Greek Myth with Enchanted Islands, a magical story of love, loss and the real-life islands that inspired the oldest travel story of all time… 

A lyrical odyssey about love, loss and Greek myth, Enchanted Islands is a new book that weaves together Laura’s experience navigating heartbreak and grief with her quest to map the real-life islands that inspired the wanderings of Homer’s epic hero, Odysseus.  Stephen Fry called it “magical and captivating – hugely recommended” It’s not remotely academic, and you don’t need to know anything about Greek myth to enjoy it.

“If you love memoir and Greek mythology this is a delight. Coffey escapes a grim and lonely pandemic for volcanos and orange-blossom brioche, kingfishers and tales of Circe. But life lies ready to sting, like the Medusa jellyfish she encounters on her evening swims. A spellbinding book about growing up, grieving and the Gods” ― Clare Pollard, author of Delphi

Stanfords fans will love this book because it blends together travel and maps, two of our favourite things.  And interestingly none of the islands Laura visited were in modern-day Greece. You’ll need to read the book to find out where she went… 

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Author Talk: Taking the Risk with Hilary Bradt

Last night we hosted a sold out event with Hilary Bradt in conversation with Matthew Parris as they discussed her new book and our April Book of the Month Taking the Risk: My adventures in travel and publishing.

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