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No Way but Gentlenesse: A Memoir of How Kes, My Kestrel, Changed My Life
Richard Hines
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Description for No Way but Gentlenesse: A Memoir of How Kes, My Kestrel, Changed My Life
Paperback. Num Pages: 288 pages. BIC Classification: 1DBKEYK; 3JB; 3JD; BM; WNCB; WNGK. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 131 x 197 x 20. Weight in Grams: 238.
Born and raised in the South Yorkshire mining village of Hoyland Common, Richard Hines remembers heaps of coal dust, listening out for the colliery siren at the end of shifts and praying for his father's safe return. When he failed his eleven-plus it seemed all too likely that he would follow in his father's footsteps and end up working in the pits - unlike his older brother Barry, who had passed the exam to grammar school and seemed to be heading for great things. Crushed by this, Richard spent his time in the fields and meadows beyond ... Read morethe slag heap. One morning, walking in the grounds of a ruined medieval manor, he came across a nest of kestrels. Instantly captivated, he sought out ancient falconry texts from the local library and pored over the strange and beautiful language there. With just these books, some ingenuity and his profound respect for the hawk's indomitable wildness, Richard learned to 'man', or train, his kestrel, Kes, and in the process found the passion that would shape his future. Richard's experiences with kestrels inspired Barry's classic novel A Kestrel for a Knave. When production began on what would become Ken Loach's iconic film Kes, Richard himself trained the kestrels that would soar on screen and into cinematic history. No Way But Gentlenesse is a superb, moving memoir of one remarkable boy's love for a forgotten culture, and his attempt to find salvation in the natural world. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 4 to 8 working days
About Richard Hines
Richard Hines has worked as a building labourer, in an office, and he was Deputy Head in a school but has spent most of his career as a documentary filmmaker, starting his own production company and working for the BBC and Channel 4, before becoming a lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University. He lives in Sheffield and frequently walks on the ... Read morenearby moors. Show Less
Reviews for No Way but Gentlenesse: A Memoir of How Kes, My Kestrel, Changed My Life
This is a work of enchanting honesty and tenderness; it is as gentle and inspiring to the reader as a falconer is with his hawks. Hines has a deep and lifelong passion for birds of prey, creatures of implacable wildness which have nevertheless lived and hunted with humans for millennia. Full of fascinating detail about the training of raptors, ... Read moreand kestrels in particular, No Way But Gentlenesse is far more than a book on falconry. Rich with history and anecdote, lit with humour and passionate social concern, it gives us new insights into the making of one of our best-loved films. It speaks of love, family, history, and education, and illuminates how an obsession can enrich and shape one's life. Reading it was a true pleasure
Helen Macdonald Reading Richard Hines's book is like seeing a myth captured and brought to earth ... Completely absorbing. His descriptions are so vivid you feel close enough to reach forward and touch
Peter Carey
Sunday Times
Richard communicates his passion for falconry and for the landscape of his home town with great warmth. He played a great part in training the three kestrels who played 'Kes'
Ken Loach It is certainly worth having. And its plain-spoken and unflashy but eloquent account, as its title suggests, of all sorts of gentleness, first to do with the taming of meat-eating raptors, but then also related to Hine's human kith and kin, runs deep into the literature birds and people ... Hine's sweet title comes from a seventeenth-century falconry manual. And gentleness sweetly pushes through much of this book
Tim Dee, Book of the Week
Guardian
A thoughtful and evocative memoir ... A must for H is for Hawk fans
Sunday Express
Kes ... is regularly hailed as a classic of British cinema. But the story behind it turns out to be almost as good as the film itself ... If the book is, in part, an account of [Barry and Richard's] relationship, at its heart is another, rather more touching bond - the one Richard enjoyed with his kestrels. He has certainly taken his time writing it, but this is a poignant, vividly recollected account of an angry, agonised and apparently earth-bound boy learning, in one sense at least, how to soar
John Preston
Daily Mail
Captivating and inspiring ... grounded and uplifting, accessible yet aspirational - a pleasurable bend of conflicts that demonstrates the power of nature and the good that comes from nurturing one's passions
Publisher's Weekly
The prose is as honed and svelte as the kestrels themselves, searingly honest, and sharp as a raptor's eye. A poignant life story that will grip you from the first to the very last page, and make you well up with tears and cry with laughter
Miriam Darlington
BBC Wildlife
A moving memoir sheds new light on a celebrated film
John Sutherland
The Times
Poetic, yearning
Charlotte Heathcote
Sunday Express
A powerful evocation of northern working-class life in the Fifties and Sixties ...This book is never bitter. On the contrary, it is the work of a man who understands that the important things in life require patience and that the most powerful means of persuasion is gentleness
Mark Cocker
Mail on Sunday
No Way But Gentlenesse pulls no punches on the issues of class and entitlement - or lack of - that also made Kes so groundbreaking... As [Hines] describes so evocatively in the book, he too was earmarked in early life and by an inflexible education system to a lesser lot in life... Falconer or just plain old bird enthusiast, if you can love something that isn't giving very much love in return, perhaps that is the greatest love... And if you can set a bird free, as Richard did for the Kestrels immortalised on film, well, even better. Letting go might even be the greatest gentlenesse
Conor Jameson
British Birds
A delightful story of a boy, his birds, and his pursuit of knowledge in spite of society's dictates
Kirkus
Beautifully written ... throughout Hines' memoir there's a sense of championing the underdog, whether it be the loving attention he paid to his kestrels as a child or the racism he found himself appalled by when he volunteered overseas in Nigeria
Yorkshire Post
The issue of class weaves through the pages ... A moving story of a man and the bird he loves
BBC Countryfile
A moving and powerful tale of the redemptive powers of nature
Stephen Moss
Guardian, 'Books of the Year'
`Wonderful'
Keggie Carew
Financial Times
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