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Seascape

Notes from a Changing Coastline

Now in paperback: A timely exploration of Wales’s coastline that challenges us to rethink our relationship with the sea and the future it holds.

Matthew Yeomans takes us on a journey along the Wales Coast Path, a stunning 870-mile (1400 km) stretch of coastline that offers much more than a breathtaking horizon. With an intimate understanding of Wales’s rich mythology and culture, Yeomans uncovers how the sea has shaped the people and communities along its shores.

Seascape is not just a celebration of the past; it’s also a call to action for the future. As climate change accelerates, Yeomans urges us to confront the harsh realities of coastal erosion and the shifting relationship between humans and the natural world. Only by reconnecting with Y Môr (the sea) can we hope to adapt and build a sustainable future.

A follow-up to his well-received book Return to My Trees, this new work dives deeper into the coastal environment, offering an urgent exploration of how the sea and climate change will continue to alter the world as we know it.


224 pages | 5.08 x 7.8 | © 2026

Biological Sciences: Natural History

Travel and Tourism: Travel Writing and Guides


View all books from University of Wales Press

Reviews

“This is a thoughtful and informative walk. We learn about Welsh history and are helped to think about the changes that we have wrought on land and contrast it with our inability to similarly dominate the marine environment.”

Sunday Book Review

Seascape is a vivid portrait of the Welsh coast as it is today, a fascinating lesson about its many salty pasts, and a clear-eyed assessment of the challenges to come, on the front line of climate change. Matthew Yeomans takes the wide view, and joins the dots, weaving a story that’s urgent and informed, but also a good blast of seaside fun.”

Mike Parker, author of All the Wide Border: Wales, England and the Places Between

“Timely in the extreme, this brisk, invigorating walk along the coast of Wales takes in the sheer variety of the land’s edge – its ruggedness and rich history – when so much of it is under serious threat. As sea-levels rise, Matthew Yeomans considers how we can deal with this aspect of climate change, from costly coastal defence to abandoning entire communities to inundation. He reminds us of the many ways the sea has nurtured and shaped the people of Wales, even as he offers a sobering reminder of our shameful disregard for the world we share.”

Jon Gower, author of The Turning Tide: A Biography of the Irish Sea

Table of Contents

Introduction
1Taming the Levels
2Turning Back the Tide
3Castles in the Sand
4Copperopolis
5Putting Faith in Science
6Below the Landsker Line
7The Sustainable Sea
8Stories of the Sea
9Farewell to Fairbourne
10The Town That was Built on a Beach
11Whose Home is This Anyway?
12Two Bridges over Troubled Waters
13The Wreck that Inspired the Shipping Forecast
14The Winds of Change

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