Robert Macfarlane – Is a River Alive? | How To Academy

Fri, 2 May 2025

7:30 pm - 8:45 pm BST

Robert Macfarlane – Is a River Alive?

Live in Conversation in London

The bestselling nature writer Robert Macfarlane joins us for a deeply personal, political, and provocative journey that will invite us to radically reimagine both rivers and life itself.

Our greatest living nature writer, Robert Macfarlane is both the author of prize-winning bestsellers including Underland, Landmarks, and The Old Ways, and an artistic polymath whose collaborators include many of the most distinguished artists, musicians, and poets of our time, including Olafur Eliasson, Johnny Flynn, and Jackie Morris.

He joins How To Academy with a single, transformative idea: are rivers alive? Inspired by the activists, artists and lawmakers of the young ‘Rights of Nature’ movement, Macfarlane will takes us on an exhilarating exploration of the past, present and futures of this ancient, urgent concept.

Transporting us from the miraculous cloud-forests of Northern Ecuador to the wounded rivers and lagoons of Southern India; and from north-eastern Quebec, where a spectacular wild river – the Mutehekau or Magpie – is being defended from death by damming in a riverrights campaign, to the fragile chalk stream that rises a mile from his house and flows through his years and days, this is a magical and radical night that will make you rethink what you think you know about rivers and about the nature of life.

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Robert Macfarlane

Award-winning nature writer

Robert Macfarlane is internationally renowned for his writing on nature, people and place. His bestselling books include Underland, Landmarks, The Old Ways, The Wild Places and Mountains of the Mind, as well as a book-length prose-poem, Ness. His work has been translated into more than thirty languages, won prizes around the world, and been widely adapted for film, music, theatre, radio and dance. In 2017, the American Academy of Arts and Letters awarded him the E.M. Forster Prize for Literature, and in 2022 in Toronto he was the inaugural winner of the Weston International Award for a body of work in the field of non-fiction. He is a Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and is currently completing his third book with Jackie Morris: The Lost Birds.