The Life and Death of St. Kilda: The moving story of a vanished island community
By (Author) Tom Steel
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPress
15th November 2011
18th August 2011
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
941.14
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 22mm
260g
The extraordinary story of the UKs most gruelling and spectacularly beautiful islands. Tom Steels acclaimed portrait of the St Kildans lives is now updated in this reissued edition.
Situated at the westernmost point of the United Kingdom, the spectacularly beautiful but utterly bleak island of St Kilda is familiar to virtually nobody. A lonely archipelago off the coast of Scotland, it is hard to believe that for over two thousand years, men and women lived here, cut off from the rest of the world.
With a population never exceeding two hundred in its history, the St Kildans were fiercely self-sufficient. An intensely religious people, they climbed cliffs from childhood and caught birds for food. Their sense of community was unparalleled and isolation enveloped their day-to-day existence.
With the onset of the First World War, things changed. For the very first time in St Kildas history, daily communication was established between the islanders and the mainland. Slowly but surely, this marked the beginning of the end of St Kilda and in August 1930, the islands remaining 36 inhabitants were evacuated.
Newly updated to include the historic appointment of St Kilda as the United Kingdoms only UNESCO Dual Heritage site, the ongoing search for information about the island and the threats that it continues to face, this is the moving story of a vanished community and how twentieth century civilization ultimately brought an entire way of life to its knees.
First-rate recreation of a vanished way of life Scotsman
Compulsive reading Guardian
Tom Steel was born in 1943 in Edinburgh, Scotland, and was educated at Daniel Stewarts College. He graduated from Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he read history, in 1965 and joined the staff of Rediffusion Television as a programme researcher. From 1968 he worked for Thames Television as producer and director on such programmes as Today, This Week, People and Politics and several network documentaries, including the series Destination America and documentaries like A Far Better Place, which told the story of St Kilda. His book The Life and Death of St Kilda, now in tenth edition, is also published by HarperCollins.