Join Peter Caton on his 10,000 mile tour of Britain, discovering what it’s like to travel on our modern railways and contemplating train journeys made over the last fifty years.
In Stand Up Sit Down Peter Caton considers the arguments for and against the choice to stand to watch football. He visits the 23 English grounds that still... Læs mere
Combining a love of remote places and of travelling on our more interesting trains, Peter visits forty of Britain’s most lonely railway stations. His travels take him to all four corners... Læs mere
Combining travel writing with a walking guide, Suffolk Coast Walk provides a wonderful insight into this fascinating county and is the companion book to Essex Coast Walk by the same author.
Peter Caton takes us on a journey along this largely unknown coastline and we learn how despite many frustrations on the way, he ended up falling in love with the coast of Essex.
A walking guide describing 50 walks along the Essex coast, the longest coastline of any English county.
A guide describing routes of 1½ to 10 miles, enabling walkers to discover the beauty, history and hidden places of Dartmoor, the wildest, most remote and arguably the most beautiful area in Southern England.
When is an island not an island? Peter Caton takes us to all four corners of England, Scotland and Wales to find out.
Illustrated with colour and monochrome photos, Dartmoor: England's Last Wilderness? is a narrative guide that explores many aspects of the moor through a series of walks and asks the question, is Dartmoor England's last wilderness?
My Father’s Dartmoor is a celebration of Peter Caton’s father’s sixty years of Dartmoor walking and campaigning, adding a little to the historical record of the National Park and completing the book that he was unable to finish.