THROUGHOUT THE turbulent events of the past 70 years Queen Elizabeth II has been a constant, stoic, reassuring presence, and Queen of Our Times, by Robert Hardman (Macmillan, £20), draws back the curtain on someone who has, at once, embodied the essential mystery of the monarchy while retaining the love, affection and deep respect of her subjects. It’s respectful, well-researched and in-depth but also chatty and full of insightful anecdotes.
Fledgling, by Hannah Bourne-Taylor (Aurum, £16.99), tells how the author, struggling with a new life in rural Ghana, rescued, hand-raised and released a swift and finch back into the wild, and Patrick Galbraith goes In Search of One Last Song (HarperCollins, £18.99), searching out ten of Britain’s most endangered birds, and the people determined to save them from extinction.
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