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Land Beneath the Waves How the Natural World Helped One Woman Navigate Chronic Illness, Self-Acceptance and Belonging

Biography / Memoir New
By: Nic Wilson(Author)
314 pages, no illustrations
Publisher: Summersdale
Land Beneath the Waves
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Average customer review
  • Land Beneath the Waves ISBN: 9781837996223 Hardback Jun 2025 In stock
    £18.99
    #268034
Price: £18.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

A moving, honest and revealing memoir of living with chronic illness, and an examination of the ways a relationship with the natural world can affect us, from debut author and nature writer Nic Wilson

When Nic Wilson begins researching the history of her local landscape and its wildlife, the last thing she wants to do is consider her own past. But as she unearths tales of giant sequoias, puss moths, nightingales and chalk streams, Nic realises her affinity with the nearby wild began as a way to handle growing up with a mother who lived with a debilitating chronic illness.

Now in her forties, and struggling with mental and physical health herself, Nic revisits her childhood to trace the influence of the natural world on her life. As she grapples with revelations from the past, the boundaries between self and land become increasingly porous, and the lure of the wetlands around her home threatens to engulf her. Can she find the strength to face the waves of chronic illness – past and present – and learn to reach for steady ground?

With the natural world facing more threats than ever before, Land Beneath the Waves inspires us to develop a meaningful bond with our local natural spaces and landscapes, illuminating a hopeful path towards a better future for human and non-human life.

Customer Reviews (1)

  • Excellent nature writing interspersed with challenging life experience
    By Jennifer 11 Jun 2025 Written for Hardback
    I’ll come clean: I am not a fan of memoirs. Or, more precisely, I dislike those populated with ‘oh, poor me’ recollections. So, I was a little wary of reading Nic Wilson’s Land Beneath the Waves, but I knew of Nic’s excellent writing for the Guardian Country Diary columns. That, the beguiling cover and wealth of positive reviews by prominent nature writers held sway and I decided to read the book. I am glad that I did.

    Yes, this is a memoir that relates dark, difficult times, but overwhelmingly it is more a memoir of nature and its capacity to heal. Any ‘oh, poor me’ voice is absent. In fact, later in the book Nic admits that she finds writing the book difficult. As a writer with chronic illness myself I can, in many ways, relate to some of Nic’s experiences. Reflections on the impact of maternal illness in Nic’s childhood, and her own illnesses infuse the book, relating experiences that some might find impossible to believe. The medical profession does not always emerge well in this book. The sadness, the frustrations, the incipient guilt and soul-searching are illuminated throughout, but Nic never merges on self-pity. It is almost as though she has stepped outside herself and taken on the role of journalist. What permeates the book, and I think Nic is too humble to articulate this, is courage and determination, despite the many frustrations she encounters.

    The greatest strengths of the book are those sections where Nic moves from any focus on her illness to examples of the relationship between the human and more-than-human world. It is out in the natural world that Nic finds comfort and healing. Two features permeate the book throughout, namely a capacity to research and relate that research in a highly readable way, and an ability to write beautifully. She endorses the ‘contemplative pace’ approach to noticing the natural world and relates what she sees with feeling and accuracy. Her words sometimes embed humour. For example, when she observes rubbish dumped in a snicket she has discovered, the reader cannot ignore the irony of it containing three recycling boxes! Similarly, completing her walk along the snicket, she notes a new Astroturf lawn and a ‘paved stub of a front garden decorated with a scattering of ash-grey aggregated’. Here we see the dissonance, seen so widely nowadays, between the beauty of the natural world and modern practices that are far from contemplating the positives of nature.

    This is not an easy read at times, but the reader is rewarded with such clarity of description, quality writing, enlightenment of the impacts of coeliac disease, adenomyosis, depression and anxiety, and the power of the natural world to heal. I, for one, hope that this experience spurs Nic to write more.
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Biography

Nic Wilson is a writer, editor and Guardian country diarist. Having taught A Level English for 12 years, she now works freelance for BBC Gardeners' World Magazine. Her work has appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies, including Under the Changing Skies: The Best of The Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 (2024), Going to Ground: An Anthology of Nature and Place (2024), Moving Mountains: Writing Nature through Illness and Disability (2023) and Women on Nature (2021). Land Beneath the Waves is her first book.

Biography / Memoir New
By: Nic Wilson(Author)
314 pages, no illustrations
Publisher: Summersdale
Media reviews

"What happens when a nature writer turns their attention to the most unnerving of all landscapes – those that exist in our bodies and minds? Nic Wilson has done just that, exploring internal thickets of tangled nature and nurture, wild gardens where the composted past feeds the present, marshes of intermingled memory and meaning. The result is a book of great courage, curiosity, discovery and connection."
– Amy-Jane Beer, author of The Flow

"Both ordinary and profound, Land Beneath the Waves charts a process most of us never manage: to give a true account of ourselves. It's also an illuminating testimony of chronic illness, one that fellow sufferers will recognise and the rest of us can only be enlarged by."
– Melissa Harrison, novelist, nature writer and children's author

"A beautiful, moving memoir highlighting the amazing relationships humans have with the natural world, and what they mean for us."
– Kate Bradbury, author, journalist and TV presenter

"A deeply honest, forensically detailed account of a life blighted by ill-health, yet redeemed by a profound connection with nature – a delight to read."
– Stephen Moss, author and naturalist

"Land Beneath the Waves is a tender portrait of how a family grows in tandem with the natural world. The body, here, is re-storied: it becomes both an object of contemplation in Wilson's quest to make sense of chronic illness across generations, and the stage for vital, lively connection with plants, water, land, and place. It is hopeful, vibrant, and alive."
– Jessica J. Lee, author and environmental historian

"A moving, honest and compassionate story of illness, and the beauty and succour to be found in the natural world. Nic reveals the complexity of our relationships with wildlife and landscapes, which does not simply offer a cure but can help us meet the challenges of chronic ill health."
– Patrick Barkham, author of Wild Child

"When our health fails, nature seems harsh, yet in Land Beneath the Waves Nic Wilson offers a tender love song to both the body and the wild world, even when – especially when – both are under threat. Exploring the complex territories of debilitating illness, motherhood and finding healing in nature, her writing reclaims the great outdoors for those who so often are shut in. Hopeful and brave."
– Merryn Glover, author of Of Stone and Sky

"This one's different. It's not another book about the soothing power of the wild (view them with suspicion) but a taut, unself-pitying inquiry into the nature of nature, the nature of suffering, the caprice of memory and the slipperiness of identity: a sort of theodicy that mentions nightingales but not God. Nothing in the real, living world is incidental, and because the book is a real, living thing, nothing here is incidental either. It's a tightly woven ecosystem of woods, anxiety, hedges and hope. It will endure long after more emollient books have been pulped."
– Charles Foster, author of Cry of the Wild

"A powerful record of the way joy in the natural world may counterbalance intergenerational illness and systemic failures. Through reconciling long-buried childhood experiences and accepting the complex reality of her own body, Nic Wilson offers a vital retort to 'the myth that worthwhile encounters with the natural world only happen to wild people in wild places'. An important and necessary addition to writing about nature and illness."
– Polly Atkins, author of Some of Us Just Fall

"A brave and beautifully written memoir of a life lived close to nature, despite the significant challenges imposed by chronic illness and pain. In Land Beneath the Waves Nic Wilson courageously explores the fragmented memories of her past, to better understand her relationships with herself, her family, and the natural world; a journey both deeply moving and full of hope. I loved this book."
– Brigit Strawbridge Howard, author of Dancing with Bees

"I loved Land Beneath the Waves. An honest and touching memoir, beautifully observed and written, and a wonderful advertisement for the importance of connection with the natural world."
– Lev Parikian, writer and conductor

"The natural world beats to its own rhythm, and when we tune in, we change state to become part of something much bigger than ourselves. When facing daily pain, both mental and physical, that can be a godsend. In Land Beneath the Waves, Nic Wilson demonstrates with gritty realism and deep feeling just how important nature is, no matter what our state of health. A moving book with depth and perception, and laced through with hope. Nature as friend, comforter and counsellor."
– Mary Colwell, environmentalist author and producer

"A brutally honest story that demonstrates why nature keeps us afloat. Nic Wilson is one of the most exciting emerging nature writers, her debut is an unstoppable tide, washing over the reader with pain but always with joy and kindness."
– Jack Wallington, author and landscape and garden designer

"An incredible journey, beautifully written, of nature's transformative powers."
– Benedict Macdonald, author of Rebirding

"With Nic Wilson's memory fragmented, her story is one that illustrates how our deep connection with the world around us is innate and how, irrespective of memory, it has the power to shape who we are. A heartfelt, honest memoir, lovingly told, that will invite you to value the nature on your doorstep."
– Hannah Bourne-Taylor, author of Fledging

"Touching and beautiful. A courageous reflection on a life spent managing long-term illness and an unreliable body, and the remarkable ways that nature can hold a family together."
– Ben Hoare, writer and editor

"I was captivated and deeply moved by this wonderful piece of writing – a balm indeed."
– Robin Ince, author and broadcaster

"Nic Wilson guides us time-slipping through her world, guided by botany, birdsong and ancient geology. A journey through overlooked snickets, the edgelands of chronic pain and anxiety and, ultimately, to finding belonging in the margins."
– Doreen Cunningham, author of Soundings

"A vivid account of intergenerational trauma and how being attuned to nature can help you get through."
– Sally Huband, writer and naturalist

"Land Beneath the Waves is a beautiful account of a deep and, at the same time, ordinary connection with nature."
– Carol Donaldson, author of The Volunteers

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