Steel River: Walking the Tees A Journey Through Nature in a Human World
By (Author) Steve Nicholls
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Apollo
1st July 2025
6th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
578.764094285
Hardback
400
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Steve Nicholls makes an epic journey along the River Tees in north-east England, from the industrial complexes near its estuary to its source high in the Pennine Hills.
The Tees estuary was where Steves life-long passion for nature was born, launching a long career as a documentary maker. As he travels the length of the eighty-mile river, he uses his years of travelling the world and his work on nature films to place the fauna and flora he encounters along the Tees in a wider context.
He weaves together strands of personal experience, nature writing, botany, geology and history with an account of the impact of human industry and agriculture on the Tees and its valley. Steel River is thus a natural and social history of a remarkable river, but also presents the Tees as a universal exemplar of environmental degradation, allowing the author to reflect on and offer prescriptions for the broken state of the natural world after 10,000 years of human activity.
The north-east has long been a place of proud industry. Beneath the sweat and grime, however, the regions biodiversity has taken a battering for generations. In Steel River, Nicholls deftly examines whether nature and by extension, humanity can ever truly heal and regenerate. * Sally Coulthard author of A Short History of the World According to Sheep *
Praise for Steve Nicholls:
Steve Nicholls is an expert guide, leading us across meadows blooming with buttercups and orchids... He presents a visually stunning, readable and scientifically rigorous survey of Britain's wildflowers.
STEVE NICHOLLS is an award-winning television documentary producer and director based in Bristol. He holds a PhD in dragonflies from the University of Bristol and is a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society of London. He has spent thirty years making wildlife films, including ten with the BBC Natural History Unit, and his plant photographs have won several awards in the prestigious International Garden Photographer of the Year competition. Nicholls is the author of Paradise Found: Nature in America at the Time of Discovery, Flowers of the Field: A Secret History of Meadow, Moor and Woodland and Plantet Insect: How Insects Conquered the Earth.