Available Formats
On This Holy Island: A Modern Pilgrimage Across Britain -- A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR
By (Author) Oliver Smith
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Continuum
3rd June 2025
27th February 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Pilgrimage
Walking, hiking, trekking
914.104862
Paperback
256
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 20mm
216g
*** A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR ***
Excellentimmensely well-researched and playful. Smith has written something special. -- Patrick Galbraith, The Times
"Imaginative and engaging" -- Country Life
Acclaimed travel writer Oliver Smith sets out to radically reframe our idea of pilgrimage in Britain by retracing sacred travel made across time, from murmurs of ritual journeys in the depths of Ice Age to new pilgrimages of the 21st century.
He embarks on an epic adventure across sacred British landscapes climbing into remote sea caves, sleeping inside Neolithic tombs, scaling forgotten holy mountains and once marooning himself at sea. Following holy roads to churches, cathedrals and standing stones, this evocative and enlightening travelogue explores places prehistoric, pagan and Christian, but also reveals how football stadiums and music festivals have become contemporary places of pilgrimage.
The routes walked are often ancient, the pilgrims he meets are always modern. But underpinning the book is a timeless truth: that making journeys has always been a way of making meaning. So often, Oliver finds, the unravelling of a path goes in tandem with the unravelling of the soul.
A FINANCIAL TIMES BEST SUMMER TRAVEL BOOK OF 2024
Smith is an ideal guide, movingly conveying the power of the places he visits.
Excellenta cornucopia of unusual and fascinating peopleOliver Smiths excellent travelogue makes it clear that the desire to go on spiritual journeys is so much larger than the Christian tradition.
[...] Through exploring a vast array of places that have become subjects of our spiritual attention and by speaking to the people who flock to them, Smith paints an extraordinary picture of British faith at its most eccentric.
[...] rich with information, historical detail and descriptive prose [...] the book is immensely well-researched and playful. Smith has written something special.
It is the ancient uncomfortably pushing against the modern that fascinates Smith aiming to travel deeper, not further, and his itinerary is an array of hallowed places mixed in with Bill Bryson-like pit stops involving Welcome Breaks and Ginsters pasties. Roaming Britain from sea caves to railway lines to fly-tipped suburbia, by way of venerated places such as Iona Abbey and Glastonbury Tor, he also leads us to lesser-known pilgrimage destinations like Walsingham, a tiny village known as Englands Nazareth where the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared in 1061
The overriding message is that every pilgrimage is unique and what is required is an open mind. To embark with hope and then, as he puts it, to break through the crust of the familiar to find the fantastical.
Oliver Smith is an acclaimed travel writer working mostly for the Financial Times, The Times and Outside Magazine in the USA. For 10 years he worked for Lonely Planet Magazine. During his time there he won Travel Writer of the Year at the Travel Media Awards, was AITO Travel Writer of the Year on three occasions, and was nominated for PPA Writer of the Year.