Former Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year winner, Julian Sayarer talks to Paul Blezard about his experiences on the small island of Surin, near the navel border of Thailand and Myanmar. Continue reading All At Sea: Another Side of Paradise with Julian Sayarer: Stanfords Travel Writers Festival 2019
The Story of Christian the Lion: Stanfords Travel Writers Festival 2019
Kicking off the 2019 Stanfords Travel Writers Festival at Destinations: The Holiday & Travel Show, John Rendall talks to Julia Wheeler about the story that captured the imagination of the world. Continue reading The Story of Christian the Lion: Stanfords Travel Writers Festival 2019
The 2019 Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards Shortlist
The shortlists for the 2019 Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards have been announced and contain an eclectic mix of writing from around the globe. This year we have introduced a new award Travel Memoir of the Year. Here are the full shortlists: Continue reading The 2019 Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards Shortlist
Our favourite games and puzzles this Christmas
It’s time for some festive fun.
Christmas is a great excuse to get family and friends together and play a board game or a puzzle. So clear the table and settle down to one of our favourites: Continue reading Our favourite games and puzzles this Christmas
This Christmas – Give the gift of Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) membership
With Christmas less than a month away, Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) membership is the ideal gift for anyone who is inspired by our planet and wants to learn more about its people, places and environments. Continue reading This Christmas – Give the gift of Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) membership
10 place names that ended up in the dictionary
New etymological guide Around the World in 80 Words by Paul Anthony Jones takes the reader on a circumnavigation of the English language, tracing the meanings and histories of eighty words derived from world place names. To whet your globetrotting appetite, here are ten of the book’s most fascinating entries …
Continue reading 10 place names that ended up in the dictionary
An Update on the Stanfords Move
A few words from our Chairman updating you on our move from Long Acre to our wonderful new store around the corner on Mercer Walk.
Continue reading An Update on the Stanfords Move
6 things you probably didn’t know about the extreme north of Greenland
In December of 2013, Alex Hibbert led an international quartet of polar travellers to the extreme north of Arctic Greenland. After a huge storm destroyed their intended route to the North Pole in the darkness of winter, instead of retreating, they decided to explore the beautiful but unforgiving region of Avanerriaq, the home of the Polar Eskimos. What followed was six months of harsh education, gripping adventure and… twenty unruly sled dogs. We asked the author of Polar Eskimo to tell us about Northern Greenland: Continue reading 6 things you probably didn’t know about the extreme north of Greenland
Where is Drury Lane? Getting lost in London by Jon Woolcott
I’m not a practical man: simple DIY tasks fox me, I don’t enjoy ladders, electricity makes me jumpy. I’ll call for technical help when my printer runs low on toner. I have a handyman on speed-dial, a capable wife, and a nearby younger brother for whom these tasks hold no terrors. But for all this I find that one science, or sort of science, Geography, is my friend. It’s not all Geography – specifically it’s a sense of place. My sense of direction, if not exactly unerring, is well attuned to the compass points. I know where I am, and mostly, where I’m going. I love Ordnance Survey maps, whatever their scale, not only for their solid reliable practicality, but for the way they situate me so completely in any landscape, and for their often remarked-upon beauty. I can spread a map on the floor and pore over it for hours, bum aloft, tracing footpaths and rivers, marvelling over contour lines marking hills and steep sided valleys, wondering over derivations of village names, imagining the lost settlements marked in that ghostly gothic script. In short, I know my way around, and I am glad of it.
Continue reading Where is Drury Lane? Getting lost in London by Jon Woolcott
Five Gulls by Tim Dee
Tim Dee Five Gulls
Tim Dee’s new book Landfill, confronts our waste-making species through the extraordinary and fascinating life of gulls, and the people who watch them.
Ahead of his event at our Bristol store on the 15th November, Tim Dee tells us about five different types of gull: