Craftland, James Fox
Craftland, James Fox
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Craftland
In Search of Lost Arts and Disappearing Trades

Author: James Fox

Narrator: James Fox

Unabridged: 7 hr 34 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/28/2025


Synopsis

An “impassioned and inspiring account of the extraordinary men and women still doing traditional artisanal work” (The Sunday Times) in the face of massive technological industrialization—by renowned Cambridge art historian Dr. James Fox.

“Beautifully written and (charmingly illustrated) . . . His chronicle of the decline of the traditional trades is staggering.”—The Wall Street Journal

During an age of mass manufacturing, fast fashion, synthetic materials and the unsustainable practice of companies valuing quantity over quality, a return to tradition, connection, and simplicity is essential.

Art historian and award-winning broadcaster Dr. James Fox explores the rapidly fading crafts and artisanal traditions of the world—such as coopering, basket-weaving, wheelwrighting, metalwork, and blacksmithing—that have shaped so much of our history through their alchemy of the hand-made human touch and generational wisdom.

Fox explains the history of craftsmanship in Britain, taking readers across the lands and communities that originated there, teaching them about the practices, traditions, and people at their heart. From coopers to thatchers, basket makers to bellfounders and dry wall builders, Fox tours Britain, once the workshop of the world, in search of its lost and disappearing craft traditions and the artisans trying to keep them alive including, a rush weaver who has managed to rebuild a sustainable business with her baskets and other wares, a bell foundry that uses the same practices it used in the nineteenth century, and dry wallers, building walls one piece of stone at a time that could last two centuries.

Part travelogue and part historical record, Craftland is a profoundly intimate meditation on our human cultural heritage, exploring what we lose as these traditions fade from view in the race of progress, and what we stand to gain if we bring them back.

About James Fox

James Fox was born in Washington, DC, in 1945 and educated in England. In addition to the international bestseller White Mischief, he is the author of The Langhorne Sisters and coauthor of Life, Keith Richards's autobiography. Fox lives in London with his wife and sons.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Stephen the Bookworm on January 07, 2026

** Shortlisted for the Nero Book Awards 2025** " Maybe it's time to realise that progress isn't actually progress." "Traditional crafts are dying all the time, vanishing from our world like butterflies from our gardens and pubs from our high streets." Simply a superb read!! In a world of fast consumeris......more

Goodreads review by Katrina on September 12, 2025

4.5 brilliantly, endlessly interesting journey through the crafts, labours, trades, work and artistry (who the hell can define "craft" really) of Britain. Reflecting our culture, industrialisation, fashions, technology, modern consumerism, rural v urban livelihoods, sustainability and traditions. Th......more

Goodreads review by Tom on September 09, 2025

An endlessly fascinating combination of social history, travel, and crafting. Fox traverses the UK to tell us about the many crafts that are woven into the fabric of who we are and how we built our societies. But more than that - and key to making this such a good book - he meets the hardy few who a......more

Goodreads review by Colin on January 13, 2026

Fascinating, compulsive reading. Not, perhaps, the sort of description often applied to books about traditional crafts, but the art historian James Fox’s book about the many forms of human ingenuity and skill at making useful, often complex and frequently beautiful objects is just that. He sets out......more

Goodreads review by Flo on January 17, 2026

An enjoyable exploration of various crafts from dry-stone walling to quilting. Some of the stories of craftspeople going against the grain of modernisation were surprisingly moving. But I didn’t feel that this book answered all the questions it raised: mainly, how can traditional craft be a template......more


Quotes

Craftland . . . is an impassioned and inspiring account of the extraordinary men and women still doing traditional artisanal work in Britain . . . [Fox] has a great eye for a telling detail.”The Sunday Times

Craftland is a book that shimmers with love for a dwindling world of meticulous, patient labour . . . Deftly written and well researched.”The Guardian

Beautifully written (and charmingly illustrated) . . . His chronicle of the decline of the traditional trades is staggering.”The Wall Street Journal

James Fox’s superb new book Craftland . . . brings his critical intelligence to platform the usually silent process of mastering a craft.”New Statesman

Craftland is a rare achievement—part cultural study, part love letter, part preservation effort . . . It’s a book for anyone who cares about heritage, hard work and authenticity. It’s a thoughtful, beautifully rendered tribute to the hands and minds that make the world.”MrWatchMaster

“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, British broadcast journalist and author of The Making of Modern Britain

“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, author of How to Art

“Absolutely wonderful. I absolutely love it! He’s describing a mostly lost world, but it seems more relevant almost by the hour; globalization and modernization are never far from my thoughts, and in these incredibly specific and fascinating stories, I feel like I’m discovering the origins of the modern world around me.”—Xand van Tulleken, co-host of A Thorough Examination and contributor to BBC Morning Live

“This hugely absorbing book is full of stories of crafts, craftspeople, communities, and creativity over the ages. They are such important stories to tell, and they are told so compellingly. Wonderful.”—Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse

This incredible book unexpectedly rewired my brain . . . Each story of craft, each person he spoke to, is so deeply interesting . . . I could not put it down.”Book Riot