Review of Tom Bates's book Peak Village Insider's Guide, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 14th August 2006, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
PEAK VILLAGE INSIDER'S GUIDES
Some publications about the Peak are written by admiring 'outsiders' but
it takes a resident author to add that extra passion and eye for detail.
Writer Tom Bates kicks off an imaginative new venture close to home
with this, his first set of village guides. Each one opens out into six
pages illustrated in colour (might there be space for a village map in
future editions?) A few tasters from the various texts explain when and
why prehistoric sites around Beeley came into being, moving forward in
time to studies of old industries and historic buildings.
A tour of Birchover reveals a connection with three of the most famous
buildings in the land ... typically for the whole series, the author sees
Birchover through a walker's eyes, whether uncovering local legends or
admiring an Open Gardens Weekend.
Of Darley Dale, we learn that this one parish holds the secret of a
toad, two trees, a pioneering engineer, steam trains and a carriage
museum. Moving up-river to Rowsley, research into local dwellings takes
fascinating priority over its stately neighbours of Haddon and
Chatsworth. The identity of the oldest structure in the village may come
as a surprise, while a name is put at last to the mason who carved two of
Rowsley's best loved features.
Stanton-in-Peak earns merits for its parish church, village pub and
cricket ground along with 'unexpected little courtyards and quaint
corners' and the evocative Bronze Age site of Stanton Moor.
The Peak Villages Insider's Guides will eventually cover 65 different
villages and Tom Bates can be relied upon to discover the true merits of
each and every one. Printed by
Chevinside Publications, guides can be purchased individually at
only 99p, or as a set of five in a plastic wallet for £4.85. Available
through local outlets including Derbyshire Libraries.