ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Elliot & Thompson
ISBN: 9781783969319
RRP: £16.99
PAGES: 272
PUBLICATION DATE:
March 26, 2026
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The Waterlands: Follow a Raindrop from Source to Sea
By Stephen Rutter
From the award-winning author of The Seafarers and Wintering comes a fascinating exploration of the most miraculous substance on Earth: water.
It falls in a moment. When the heaviest droplets of ice can no longer be held, the first raindrop slips from the sky and plunges, down through the damp, cold air, thawing as it plummets. Splashing into the sodden hillside, rainfall merging with river source, it flows for the first time.
The Waterlands is a new story of water, revealing its natural rhythms and miraculous power. Follow a raindrop as it flows through diverse waterscapes: river sources in the upland moors; saltmarsh-flanked firths and estuaries; serene and spectacular lochs; crystal-clear chalk streams; blanket bogs that are both land and liquid, a thin skin of peat over millennia-old water.
On this epic journey, award-winning writer Stephen Rutt visits these places where life flourishes, revealing how water shapes the land, shapes our lives – and how we shape it in return. Beautifully blending geography, ecology, climate writing and social history, The Waterlands is a captivating retelling of the water cycle, and an urgent call to protect our most essential resource.
You’ll never see a raindrop the same way again.
Stephen Rutter
Stephen Rutt is a writer and naturalist, specialising in creative non-fiction prose and birds.
His first book, The Seafarers: A Journey Among Birds, was about the charismatic seabirds of Britain, the dramatic coastal places they live and the people who study them, live with them and write about them. For The Seafarers, he won the Saltire Society’s first book award as well as a Society of Author’s Roger Deakin award. It was long-listed for the Highland Book Prize. Wintering: A Season with Geese was his second book and concerned the lives of the wild geese that spend the winter with us in Britain and their cultural heritage. It was one of The Times’s best nature books of the year for 2019. The Eternal Season is his third book: it looks at our summer wildlife, from trees and flowers to dragonflies, butterflies, moths, natterjack toads and wasp spiders alongside plenty of familiar and unfamiliar summer birds. The narrative traces out the context, historic and current of these species and how we can see climate change in the changing nature of summer.
His writing has been published in The Guardian, The Scotsman, The Sunday Post, British Birds, EarthLines and Zoomorphic.
He lives in Dumfries and Galloway with his wife and daughter.