Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Weird Walk
Weird Walk: Wanderings and Wonderings through the British Ritual Year | Weird Walk
10 posts | 1 read
The first book by iconic zine creators and cultural phenomenon Weird Walk. This is a superbly designed guide to Britain's strange and ancient places, to standing stones and pagan rituals, and to the process of re-enchantment via weird walking. In this book is a radical idea. By walking the ancient landscape of Britain and following the wheel of the year, we can reconnect to our shared folklore, to the seasons and to nature. Let this hauntological gazetteer guide you through our enchanted places and strange seasonal rituals: SPRING: Watch the equinox sunrise light up the floating capstone of Pentre Ifan and connect with the Cailleach at the shrine of Tigh nam Bodach in the remote Highlands SUMMER: Feel the resonance of ancient raves and rituals in the stone circles of southwest Englands Stanton Drew, Avebury and the Hurlers AUTUMN: Bring in the harvest with the old gods at Coldrum Long Barrow, and brave the ghosts on misty Blakeney Point WINTER: Make merry at the Chepstow wassail, and listen out for the sunken church bells of the lost medieval city of Dunwich
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
Bookwomble
post image

Sitting in the spring sunshine, listening to the Bill Evans Evans Trio play the relaxing 🌷Spring is Here🌷, drinking coffee, cat minding (which is easier now we've had a broken fence panel replaced) and reading Weird Walk No. 2, which includes articles on the Third Doctor's folk horror storyline, The Dæmons, progressive Morris dancing, Stonehenge-inspired rock & foraging.
#TuesdayTunes @TieDyeDude
https://youtu.be/zhvA0P_qQms?si=RfvjbevsTaPFhP4z

quote
Bookwomble
post image

"The message of the English landscape is one of embrace - is one of humankind's ability to find our individual narratives among the pathways and allow those narratives to coexist harmoniously. My ghosts and your ghosts each take up zero space while coexisting in the same location; my myths and your myths have equal footing and, in fact, combine to form new, better, stronger myths."

Justin Hopper, Weird Walk zine #1

Kerrbearlib Gorgeous picture. 3w
dabbe It reminds me of Walden Pond. 💙🩵💙 3w
Bookwomble @Kerrbearlib @dabbe It's sunset at Bassenthwaite Lake where we're staying for a few days 😊 3w
Leftcoastzen Beautiful! 3w
dabbe @Bookwomble 🤩🤩🤩 3w
37 likes5 comments
review
Bookwomble
post image
Pickpick

The Weird Walk zine is greater than the sum of its parts, though its parts are very good.
At 40 pages, there is, of necessity, a brevity to the articles, but the atmosphere created is cohesive, a folkiness with strands woven of calmness and unease, groundedness and ethereality, and a modernity steeped in a deep antiquity. It's a hauntological love letter to the English landscape 💚💛💚

Bookwomble [Review is for No. 1 of the zine, not the tagged book, which is also marvellous.] 3w
Luke-XVX You ever go in Treadwells? I got some of my copies in there and the rest online 2w
Bookwomble @Luke-XVX If that's the shop in Bloomsbury I found online, no I've not been there. It seems to have opened just before I left the London area to return home to Lancashire, though I'd have certainly visited it if I'd known of its existence! 😊 2w
See All 6 Comments
Luke-XVX The zine Hwaet will be right up your street too! 2w
Bookwomble @Luke-XVX 😍 Hwaet!! You aren't wrong! Thanks for the heads up. Looks like another collection soon to be started. I'll tell Mrs B it's your fault! 😄 2w
Luke-XVX Surely you get a free pass in the pursuit of knowledge ?? Haha 2w
33 likes6 comments
blurb
Bookwomble
post image

We're in the Lakes for a few days, and I picked up another couple of issues of the Weird Walk zine: nos. one and seven.
Topics in 1 include folklore, music, poetry, medieval graffiti and standing stones. Topics in 7 include forests (a bit of an accidental theme for me so far this year), the Northumbrian Holy Island, cheese lore (!), and old stones.

LeahBergen Enjoy your holiday! Is that the Lake District? (Sorry, Canadian here 😄). 3w
Cathythoughts Sounds like interesting reading. Especially if you‘re there ❤️ 3w
Bookwomble @LeahBergen Sorry - Anglocentric! - yes, the Lake District. We're staying near Bassenthwaite Lake, the only body of water in the Lakes with the word "Lake" in it's name ? 3w
Bookwomble @Cathythoughts They're really neat little zines: interesting articles and lovely photos and illustrations. 3w
LeahBergen Thanks! I‘ve always wanted to visit the area! 3w
39 likes5 comments
blurb
Bookwomble
post image

#DayOffAdventures
I wanted to visit one of the sites described in the book while reading it, & I've driven 2½ hours to Castlerigg by Keswick, Lake District. Even with tourists here (of which I'm one) it's a special place. A natural amphitheatre on a colossal scale which my photos can't do justice to. Sounds of crows, tweety birds, lambs and the occasional car, engine struggling up hill. The people are quiet and respectful, as befits the setting 😌

Soubhiville Beautiful! 11mo
Leftcoastzen So cool! Would love to visit these incredible sites ! 11mo
LeahBergen Very cool! 11mo
Bookwomble @Soubhiville @Leftcoastzen @LeahBergen It is an amazing place. I'll definitely visit again. 11mo
37 likes4 comments
quote
Bookwomble
post image

"At the close of the last Ice Age, over 12,000 years ago, people walked to a place that would one day become known as great Britain."

#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

blurb
Bookwomble
post image

Reading about neolithic monuments, folk traditions and the re-enchanting of the British landscape, & Julian Cope appears in the Avebury chapter, so I'm listening to his albums Jehovahkill & 20 Mothers, which have a high quotient of lyrical & musical relevance to these topics. Julian was well into his Modern Antiquarian phase with these recordings, including songs and poems about stone circles, henges and paganism. It's a mood! 🪨🛸
#BooksAndMusic

quietlycuriouskate Those Julian Cope albums have just transported me back to a leaky, mouldy, freezing flat in Bristol! The vibe was constant stress, and flashes of elation, served with a side order of chronic chest infection. 11mo
Bookwomble @quietlycuriouskate Was this a nostalgia experience, or a PTSD flashback? Either way, it sounds intense! I hope you're ok, and that it's not put you off the Archdrude's music 😊💗 11mo
quietlycuriouskate A little of both, perhaps? Don't worry, me and Copey are good! ☺️ 11mo
Bookwomble @quietlycuriouskate Good to hear on all accounts 😊 11mo
27 likes4 comments
blurb
Bookwomble
post image

I like reading about other people getting their exercise. You keep walking weird, I'll keep reading weird!
I might've expected the hardcover to be a collection of articles from the zines of this collective of ramblers through the British pagan countryside, but I didn't think of it, so now I'm less sure about collecting all the zine issues, but that petty quibble aside, this is a lovely book in the tradition of Julian Cope's The Modern Antiquarian.

vivastory Book title made me think of one of this classic comedy skit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iV2ViNJFZC8
11mo
Bookwomble @vivastory 😄 Yes, it had put that sketch in my mind, too. Also Max Wall's variety act, and that of Wilson, Keppell and Betty, that the Pythons were definitely channeling. 11mo
Bookwomble I think I may have been mistaken in thinking that the articles are lifted wholesale from the zines. The foreword by Stewart Lee is certainly adapted, and enlarged, from zine #4, but comments within the text suggest that the book contains new material. I guess I'll only know if I buy the zines! 🤷‍♂️ 11mo
35 likes3 comments
blurb
Bookwomble
post image

I read a review for this album last week in Weird Walk #4 zine, and listened to it on Bandcamp. It captures the artist's (Charles Vaughan) impressions of walking through the British countryside near or in sight of electricity pylons.
The listener may either find this a pleasantly relaxing and atmospheric experience (me) or "about as musically interesting as listening to the compressor pump on the fridge" (my wife).
#TuesdayTunes @TieDyeDude

TieDyeDude I like it! Relaxing, but it has a little bit of an edge to keep it from totally fading into the background. 12mo
Bookwomble @TieDyeDude That's it! I really like it - I'm glad you do, too 😊 12mo
32 likes3 comments
quote
Bookwomble
post image

“Who owns the British countryside?“

#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

My daughter bought me this zine, Weird Walk: A Journal of Wanderings and Wonderings from the British Isles, which focuses on “walking [as] an active engagement with the British landscape and its lore“. This is issue 4, dated Imbolc, 2021.
There are essays about the intersection of British Afro-Carribean culture and British folk traditions by broadcaster Zakia Sewell, ⬇️

Bookwomble ... a guided walk by Stewart Lee, and an interview with Nick Hayes on trespassing. Lots of other content, all squeezed into 48 pages 💚
Zine, and other things, available from the website (sadly, bookmarks sold out 🙁)
https://www.weirdwalk.co.uk/
(edited) 12mo
bibliothecarivs I need this! Will have to check out the site. 12mo
Bookwomble @bibliothecarivs I think you'd love them, Joseph. There's seven issues so far, I think - it's fairly infrequent, but from this one example I've seen, very well produced with some good contributors. 12mo
37 likes3 comments