Review of Richard Bell's book High Peak Drifter, 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 23rd October 2006, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
HIGH PEAK DRIFTER
The review copy of this book arrived with a delightfully illustrated compliment slip
tucked inside a bright cover showing Winnats Pass. Living up to that early promise,
High Peak Drifter contains almost 100 pages of sketches and meditations from
Richard Bell, a 'nature journaler' who has walked and drawn his way across the wild
heart of the Peak District National Park.
It often seems that there are two kinds of walkers - those whose gaze is more or
less long distance, relishing the views, and others who could be described as bifocal,
taking equal pleasure from details that the striders miss. Richard Bell is one of the
latter. Certainly he captures spectacular scenery but points out too that the Peak
District 'goes deeper than picture postcard prettiness; all the time you're here you're
surrounded by 1001 small details ...'
Hence a carved hand on a 300-year-old guidepost; fighting serpents on a church
cross, newts in a roadside pond and a scratched rock which turned out to be an
unusual geological find. One drawing ties in with a series of coincidences that has
been chasing me all summer. This sketch shows a hummingbird hawkmoth posing
above a spear thistle at Castleton. The link began when my son swore he had seen
a humming bird on the honeysuckle. To our lasting disgrace we all laughed, but he
was vindicated when it transpired that other people are being fooled by this peculiar
migrant species. Thanks to Richard's drawing, our daughter knew exactly what she
was seeing when she photographed two more.
Richard Bell draws in all weathers, even taking a folding chair and fishing umbrella
to work in the rain. Sketches bear his observations and such chilly notes as 'Bamford
30/1/06. 5 deg looking N.' That was a five-layer-of-clothing day. He experiments with
blotting effects to capture misty moors and low cloud, and varies his materials on
location, from a fountain pen to a bamboo dipstick and small jars of Chinese ink.
High Peak Drifter practically begs the reader to close in on the great outdoors, not
just with binoculars but, like Richard, with a magnifying glass and reading glasses.
Published by Willow Island Editions
the book is on sale locally priced £6 or to order
quoting ISBN 1-902467-16-7.