The Coast is Our Compass

A pilgrimage along the world’s longest coastal path – the new King Charles III England Coast Path

Available from these popular bookshops and online stores Bradt or Waterstones or Bookshop.org or Amazon and will be published on 19th March 2026, to coincide with the opening of this new National Trail.

Part travelogue, part nature writing, part exploration of the soul and of England’s relationship to its coastline and its importance to our identity

A travel narrative less about where we go than why, The Coast is Our Compass is a book like no other.

“A beautifully composed account into a special coastal journey, from start to finish, an example of the importance of the outdoors and how this freedom and expansion of knowledge only adds to our happiness and the experience of our existence on this earth.”– Adam Bridgland, Artist

Why do we walk? Why do we like to be beside the sea? And what happens when you infuse these questions into a journey around the coast of England – a pilgrimage in search of art, culture, community and glorious natural wealth along the world’s longest managed coastal path? Extending well beyond the confines of a walking memoir, The Coast is our Compass addresses all this and more.

“This journey captures an important moment in time as a new National Trail around the coast of England reaches completion. The King Charles III England Coast Path will help millions of people to connect with nature. Martyn champions the transformative power of walking, and his insights reveal a culturally rich and dynamic coast under threat from development, climate change and nature crisis.”  – Julian Gray Co-Chair World Trails Network

Getting outdoors, hiking the littoral boundaries of a nation along the King Charles III England Coast Path, author Martyn Howe encounters diverse landscapes and communities, and learns much about England’s of the new atomic age environment and the social challenges that will influence our future. Rich in nature writing, The Coast is Our Compass campaigns for the environment and for the protection of the landscape. Howe also discovers that long-distance backpacking – a simple life, liberated from consumerism by carrying just a few important possessions, and free from online addiction – gives him time to reflect and process many issues, often through the lens of public art or through observing the juxtaposition between industry and nature. The Coast is Our Compass explores England’s relationship to its coastline and its importance to our identity: the sea-cliffs, estuaries, saltmarshes and beaches hold uncountable memories and heritage that shape our inner world.

‘I only went out for a walk, and finally concluded to stay out until sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in’. – John Muir

Similarly, Howe’s exploration is philosophical, psychological and deeply personal. Written during a period of family turmoil – grieving for parents, brothers and friends, and learning of a new sister – Howe’s journey ventures inwards. Walking alone he learns, unclothes the ego, rendering us vulnerable yet approachable. This new state opens the senses, facilitates connection, enables us to tune into the landscape, to listen to what people have to say, to lose ourselves in the sensation of the outdoors – where a rainy day is no longer a challenge, but a joy infused with respect for nature.

“A remarkable journey of the boundary between the sea and land, and the inner and outer self.” – Marcus Vergette, Sculptor and Musician, Time and Tide Bells.

A travel narrative less about where we go than why, The Coast is Our Compass is a book like no other.

Order copy now from one of these popular bookshops or online stores.

Book artwork Day Moon by Debbie Lyddon

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