Villages are the very embodiment of Englishness. The village inn and the local farm, great houses, humble cottages and beautiful country gardens speak of a way of life that has developed peacefully since Anglo-Saxon times. A few days spent in England's idyllic villages offers urban dwellers and foreign visitors a revitalizing glimpse of a more tranquil existence, full of history, legend, literature and artistic heritage. The beauty and diversity of the English village are recorded in this book in absorbing commentary and magnificent photography by James Bentley and Hugh Palmer.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading through and looking at all the wonderful photographs in this gorgeous book. I was almost transported to some of these wonderful English villages. A perfect companion for anyone who loves the English countryside and the beautiful and quaint houses, pubs and inns of it's many villages.
I love a good book full of photographs. this one was well worth the pickup and look through. the villages looked as one pictures when reading Miss Read or D. E. Stevenson. I hope to go see for myself one day, though I'm sure many changes have occurred.
The reading was a tough steak to chew, but the photographs by Palmer are easily worth the look-see. Unfortunately, the author/editor(s) overlooked a few inconsistencies: 1. Many buildings are represented as being of later centuries, such as 18th or 19th, but can clearly be seen connected to earlier buildings (14th, 15th etc). Just because a building has an 18th century facade, it does NOT mean it is a work of that century. Many times the timber frames are much older. Had the author or photographer simply knocked and interviewed the homeowner(s), they would've discovered a truth that was not present in this publication. 2. When a building's upper storey is of greater space than the lower storey, the bit that protrudes is called a jetty, not an overhang. Overhang is a term fairly exclusive to American architecture that usually refers to roofs or awnings.
Other than these minor discrepancies, this book was totally worth the read. It was an optimistic departure to last book I read on the subject (which had more of an analytic, pessimistic tone), even if The Most Beautiful is more of the coffee-table travel fare.
The English village is a thing very near and dear to my heart..So when i'm not visiting them, I'm looking for them or reading about them..This had the potential to be so much more! Lots of villages left out! Notable omissions being Chipping Camden, Chipping Norton (Oxfordshire) Broadway, Morton in the Marsh, Bourton on the water, Bibury, Richmond (?is it a village)etc etc... Hemingford Grey: the Manor was the home of beloved author Lucy M Boston, who wrote the hauntingly beautiful Green Knowe series, which wasn't mentioned... I learned about a few villages I hadn't encountered before. Also the photos were lovely, I just wish there had been more for each village!
I get that by shooting most of the photos in the winter we literally see more of the architecture of the villages included here, but that means that if you're expecting the green, lush cover image of this book to represent its contents, you may be disappointed. Also, gotta say, there were a good deal of truly boring buildings spotlighted, and perhaps a few too many shots of church interiors. Despite the author's obvious knowledge of and passion for the subject, I just wasn't convinced that these were actually the most beautiful villages of England.