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Land

How the Hunger for Ownership Shaped the Modern World

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Land

By: Simon Winchester
Narrated by: Simon Winchester
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About this listen

From the bestselling author Simon Winchester, a human history of land around the world: who mapped it, owned it, stole it, cared for it, fought for it and gave it back.

In 1889, thousands of hopeful people raced southward from the Kansas state line and westward from the Arkansas boundary to stake claims on the thousands of acres of unclaimed pastures and meadows. Across the twentieth century, water was dammed and drained in Holland so that a new province, Flevoland, rose up, unchartered and requiring new thinking. In 1850, California legislated the theft of land from Native Americans. An apology came in 2019 from the governor, but what of the call for reparations or return? What of government confiscation of land in India, or questions of fairness when it comes to New Zealand’s Maori population and the legacy of settlers?

The ownership of land has always been complicated, opaque, and more than a little anarchic when viewed from the outside. In this book, Simon Winchester explores the the stewardship of land, the ways it is delineated and changes hands, the great disputes, and the questions of restoration – particularly in the light of climate change and colonialist reparation.

A global study, this is an exquisite exploration of what the ownership of land might really mean – not in dry-as-dust legal terms, but for the people who live on it.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2021 Simon Winchester (P)2021 HarperCollins Publishers Limited
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Critic reviews

‘Winchester makes a convincing case.... Succeeds resoundingly in making us think more deeply about the everyday objects we take for granted. It challenges us to reflect on our progress as humans and what has made it possible. It is interesting, informative, exciting and emotional, and for anyone with even some curiosity about what makes the machines of our world work as well as they do, it’s a real treat." (New York Times)

"Simon Winchester’s new book is a tale of many triumphs.... His delight in words cannot be bridled, so that even 'Exactly,' which is, after all, a nonfiction treatment of technology, brims with amusing and rare nouns such as bagatelle, bijoux, cynosure, seraglio and susurrus. These whir smoothly alongside the argot of the machine shop. Mr. Winchester covers more than 200 years of fine-tuning in this work, and corrals a large cast of eccentric individuals." (Wall Street Journal)

"An ingenious argument that the dazzling advances that produced the scientific revolution, the industrial revolution, and the revolutions that followed owe their success to a single engineering element: precision. An enthusiastic popular-science tour of technological marvels...readers will love the ride." (Kirkus)

What listeners say about Land

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A riveting and penetrating analysis

a clear, articulate and sobering account of man's lust and greed for land at the expense of his fellow creature

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Superb.....

Beautifully written and narrated by Simon Winchester,Land , important to us all but misunderstood by the majority. Winchester weaves an interesting plethora of facts based upon his and a wide variety of others opinions resulting in an excellent read or listen, excellent.

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The two types of hunger

Sometimes, just to get by, all you want is a snack, a brief mouthful to quell the hunger before doing other things. Fast food, the grabbed sandwich, the toasted bun fills this need. But other times you want to enjoy conversation, company, breaking bread, sharing a time to enjoy living in a community. This is a time for slow food, lingering over a small plate, tasting every morsel and bite, reflecting on the joy of being alive.

This is an audiobook for the spring. Relax in the warm sunlight and listen to “Land” which is “slow food for the mind” - a long and loving and thought provoking experience which, in its audible format as read by its author, is balm for the soul. Instead of a sixty or ninety minute drama, all too present in Netflix and its ilk, this is thirteen hours and forty six minutes of a reflection on the past and future of our world, crystallized in lyrical prose. It is the perfect antidote to lockdown blues, a way of transporting yourself away from just existing to seeing a bigger picture, a world that changes, a society that evolves, a threat that looms and a hope that that threat can be overcome.


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Simon Winchester never fails to deliver

Another wonderful narrative from Mr Winchester, enhanced because he reads his books himself, so no reflection, nuance or key point is missed. As really the next in the series of Atlantic and Pacific, his almost unique combination geologist, geographer, anthropologist, historian and journalist bring to the reader and informed and thought provoking argument that in these times of seas rising and populist leaders and dictators looking for ‘buffers’ and historical grounds of origin resonates loudly. I’m fortunate to have a Masters in Defence studies, this and his previous books should be on the mandatory reading list. Brilliant as ever.

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Very nice way to look at things

I think he seems like a lovely man and I agree with most of his points. But I don’t remember the book being free wink

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Really interesting book, well read

This is one of the most interesting books I’ve listened to in a long time. The first half of the book in particular is a great reflection on history and philosophy of ownership. If I’m honest, the second half feels a bit like he’s shoe horning other topics in, and vaguely linking them to the title, but they’re still interesting. Author is also a very good narrator I think, very calming but wise voice suitable to such a topic.

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One for the insomniacs out there!

This is literally the worst book I have ever read, the narration by the author is dreadful, clearly too tight to pay for someone with a tolerable voice.

The content is what can be expected from a baby boomer liberal journalist, full of middle class white guilt and and tedious virtue signalling from start to finish. I nearly laughed out loud when he began with a quote from Rousseau. Avoid.

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