Skip to content

Richard Carter

  • About
    • About me (home page)
    • Contact me
    • Where to follow me
    • Now…
    • Books I read in 2023
  • Contents
    • Search
    • Site Map
  • My Books
    • On the Moor
    • Through Darwin’s Eyes
  • Writing
    • All Writing
      • Sidelines (blog)
      • Newsletter
      • Reviews
    • RSS feed

Writing tagged: ‘Massimo Pigliucci’

Gannet, Bempton Cliffs

Newsletter No. 23: ‘Emerging from aestivation’

Massimo Pigliucci · ‘spirituality’ · Barry Lopez · talking trees · Eleanor Konik · rewilding · Mark Cocker · light pollution · Sir Clive Sinclair · Horatio Clare · swifts · The Enlightenment

Published 01-Oct-2021
Filed under: Writing Tags: Alice Roberts, Barry Lopez, Horatio Clare, light pollution, Mark Cocker, Massimo Pigliucci, rewilding, spirituality, swifts, The Enlightenment

RECENT SIDELINES

Down the Rocks Anglesey 2023 What we saw on our annual holiday in Anglesey.
The Baptism of Christ (Verrocchio & Leonardo ‘Lesser’ truth v artistic licentiousness I don’t buy claims that paintings are more accurate than photographs, and novels more truthful than factual writing.
Mark Cocker and other naturalists in Nutclough Wood Cocker, the walk A short walk with Mark Cocker to admire the natural grandeur of a Yorkshire wood.
Flight event Propellor: Flight // In Conversation A cross-genre performance of music and words.

LATEST NEWSLETTER

Rich Text Newsletter No. 31: ‘When nice old ladies wave’ Crossing paths with the queen · medieval books · palimpsests · pelicans · prehistoric forests · runways · light pollution · Stendhal · spiders · Musk · and more…

RECENT READING

RECENT PHOTOS

  • ‘Rich Text’ Newsletter
  • Richard Carter’s book: ‘On the Moor’
  • Richard Carter on Mastodon
  • Richard Carter on Threads
  • Richard Carter’s photos on Instagram
  • Richard Carter’s Facebook page
  • Richard Carter on Twitter (@friendsofdarwin)
  • Richard Carter’s photos on Flickr
  • Buy Richard a coffee
  • RSS feed
  • The Friends of Charles Darwin
Richard Carter
The whole is greater than some of its parts.