#BookReview The Outrun by Amy Liptrot #NonficNov

the outrunAbout the Book

At the age of thirty, Amy Liptrot finds herself washed up back home on Orkney. Standing unstable on the island, she tries to come to terms with the addiction that has swallowed the last decade of her life. As she spends her mornings swimming in the bracingly cold sea, her days tracking Orkney’s wildlife, and her nights searching the sky for the Merry Dancers, Amy discovers how the wild can restore life and renew hope.

Format: Paperback (286 pages) Publisher: Canongate Books
Publication date: 2018 [2016]   Genre: Memoir

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Outrun on Goodreads


My Review

The author describes in unflinching detail the impact of alcoholism on all aspects of her life and the harmful and reckless behaviour she engaged in as a result. Having reached the lowest of low points, she shows remarkable courage in embarking on a treatment programme and taking the first difficult steps to sobriety.

Returning to Orkney where she grew up (from where she had originally fled in search of a more exciting life in London) the author slowly starts to rebuild her life. The really interesting and engaging aspect of the book is the connections she makes between her observations of the natural world around her and her recovery process. For example: ‘When I first came back to Orkney I felt like the strandings of jellyfish, laid out on the island rocks for all to see. I was washed-up: no longer buoyant, battered and storm-tossed.’

Testing herself still further, she moves to one of the remote islands off Orkney – Papay – and becomes involved in the life of its small community of hardy souls. She discovers an interest in astronomy, wild swimming, snorkelling, folklore and the birds and other creatures that make the island and the sea that surrounds it their home. Or, as the author puts it, ‘In these two years I have put my energy into searching for elusive corncrakes, Merry Dancers and rare cloud; into swimming in cold seas, running naked around stone circles, sailing to abandoned islands, flying on tiny planes, coming back home’.

The message I took from the book is that, even at one’s lowest point, there is always the possibility of something better. I found that both moving and inspiring. I’ll leave you with a few quotes that will, I hope, give you a sense of this.

Since I got sober, I sometimes find myself surprised and made joyful by normal life… Life can be bigger and richer than I knew.’

Recovery is making use of something once thought worthless. I might have been washed-up but I can be renewed.’

The Outrun is the third book on my reading list for Nonfiction November.

In three words: Unflinching, honest, inspiring

Try something similar: The Salt Path by Raynor Winn

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About the Author

Amy Liptrot has published her work with various magazines, journals and blogs and she has written a regular column for Caught by the River out of which The Outrun emerged. As well as writing for newspapers including the Guardian and the Observer, Amy has worked as an artist’s model, a trampolinist and in a shellfish factory. The Outrun was awarded the 2016 Wainwright Prize and the 2017 PEN Ackerley Prize and was shortlisted for the 2016 Wellcome Prize and the 2017 Ondaatje Prize.

Connect with Amy
Website | Twitter

 

#NonficNov Nonfiction November: Be The Expert

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Nonfiction November continues and this week’s discussion prompt is Be The Expert/Ask the Expert/Become the Expert, hosted by Katie at Doing Dewey.

As Katie explains, there are three ways to join in this week:

  • Be The Expert – share 3 or more books on a single topic that you have read and can recommend
  • Ask The Expert – put the call out for good nonfiction on a specific topic that you have been dying to read
  • Become The Expert – create your own list of books on a topic that you’d like to read

20180510_094523I’m not sure I’d be so bold as to classify myself as an ‘expert’ but, as regular followers of my blog will know, I’ve certainly read a lot about the author John Buchan. So it will come as no surprise that this is the subject I’m focusing on today.

I’ve read plenty of his fiction as part of my Buchan of the Month reading project but here are a few nonfiction gems from my Buchan bookshelf (pictured left).

Links from the titles will take you to my review or the book description on Goodreads.

Biographies
Beyond The Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John Buchan by Ursula Buchan – published earlier this year and written by his granddaughter
John Buchan: A Biography by Janet Adam Smith – the first biography of Buchan, published in 1965, written at the request of his family
John Buchan: The Presbyterian Cavalier by Andrew Lownie

Literary Criticism
The Interpreter’s House: A Critical Assessment of the Work of John Buchan by David Daniell – the first full-length analysis of Buchan’s writing
Reassessing John Buchan: Beyond The Thirty-Nine Steps edited by Kate MacDonald – a collection of essays by Buchan scholars and enthusiasts
Modern John Buchan: A Critical Introduction by Nathan Waddell – scholarly reflections from a modern perspective on Buchan’s books

Memoirs
John Buchan: By His Wife and Friends by Susan Tweedsmuir
Unforgettable, Unforgotten by Anna Buchan (Buchan’s sister, who wrote novels under the pseudonym O Douglas)
John Buchan: A Memoir by William Buchan (second son of John Buchan and father of Ursula Buchan)
John Buchan and His World by Janet Adam Smith – full of fascinating photographs
Memory Hold-The-Door by John Buchan – the author’s own memoir which he described with customary self-deprecation as ‘not an ordinary autobiography or any attempt to tell the unimportant story of my life’

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