Craftland
A Journey Through Britain’s Lost Arts and Vanishing Trades
- Published: 4 September 2025
- ISBN: 9781529924183
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
Craftland is a book that shimmers with love for a dwindling world of meticulous, patient labour … Lyrical … Deftly written and well researched
Guardian
A beautifully crafted book – akin to the beautifully crafted objects it describes … What a treat to discover facts and stories that feed the heart and prove that craft is as ever present as it has forever been
Kate Malone, ceramist
This hugely absorbing book is so full of stories of crafts and craftspeople and communities, and of creativity over the ages. It’s such an important story to tell and told so compellingly. Wonderful
Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse
Beautiful, eye-opening and surprisingly moving - a treat to treasure
Lucy Worsley, author of Jane Austen at Home
It is so rare to come across a book brimming with fresh news and seasoned with hope. James Fox uncovers a largely hidden history which is still alive all around us today. I read it in two gulps with delight
Andrew Marr, author and journalist
A dazzling combination of evocative prose and meticulous research, Craftland is an impassioned undertaking and novel portrait of the country’s past and how we might rethink our future
Kate Bryan, art historian
This extraordinary book is essential reading. It will leave you awestruck at the complexity and persistence of the crafts that shaped our world, and inspired to engage more deeply with our vanishing material world of objects and skills. Anyone who has ever felt a disconnection from modern life will find themselves irresistibly drawn in
Xand Van Tulleken
An impassioned and inspiring account of the extraordinary men and women still doing traditional artisanal work in Britain
Sunday Times, *Book of the Week*
Meet the weavers, watchmakers and wheelwrights keeping Britain’s noble craft traditions alive … Fox effortlessly persuades the reader about the superiority of all things crafted
Mail on Sunday
If you want to know about Britain and yourself, read this book … This is a tremendous book that urges us – in spite of the seductions of crass modernity – to believe in the craftspeople, living and dead, who made us who we are.
Spectator
Utterly enchanting
Amol Rajan, BBC Radio 4 Today
Brillian[t] … I recommend that the book be read slowly, section by section, so all the details can be appreciated
Literary Review
Superb … A book with many highlights … [Fox] brings his critical intelligence to platform the usually silent process of mastering a craft. I read the book with admiration not only for the remarkable subjects individually, but also the human spirit that unites them all
New Statesman
This hugely absorbing book is so full of stories of crafts and craftspeople and communities, and of creativity over the ages. It’s such an important story to tell and told so compellingly. Wonderful
Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse
This extraordinary book is essential reading. It will leave you awestruck at the complexity and persistence of the crafts that shaped our world, and inspired to engage more deeply with our vanishing material world of objects and skills. Anyone who has ever felt a disconnection from modern life will find themselves irresistibly drawn in
Xand Van Tulleken
It is so rare to come across a book brimming with fresh news and seasoned with hope. James Fox uncovers a largely hidden history which is still alive all around us today. I read it in two gulps with delight
Andrew Marr, author and journalist
Beautiful, eye-opening and surprisingly moving - a treat to treasure
Lucy Worsley, author of Jane Austen at Home
A dazzling combination of evocative prose and meticulous research, Craftland is an impassioned undertaking and novel portrait of the country’s past and how we might rethink our future
Kate Bryan, art historian
A beautifully crafted book – akin to the beautifully crafted objects it describes … What a treat to discover facts and stories that feed the heart and prove that craft is as ever present as it has forever been
Kate Malone, ceramist