A lifelong bookworm and lover of stories, Laura Pashby graduated from the University of Bristol with an MA in Modern & Contemporary Poetry. Her obsession with photography began on her15th birthday when her dad gave me an Olympus Trip camera and made their downstairs cloakroom into a home darkroom. She's been taking pictures ever since. Her work has appeared in publications including The Simple Things, Ernest Journal, Project Calm, Country Homes & Interiors, Oh Magazine, Metro and Lionheart. She spent three years as the Deputy Editor of independent lifestyle magazine 91. You can find her on Instagram @circleofpines.
"'A lovely meander through foggy landscapes and their meanings' -- Katherine May 'A charming exploration of fog, mist, haar and haze that captures that dreamy state of mind that accompanies it and the uncanny aspect of low visibility. Laura Pashby guides us across gloomy moors lit by will-o-the-wisps, past clifftop beacons beating out their loyal rhythms, and through the labyrinthine, mist-wreathed streets of Venice. Eerie and evocative' -- Cal Flyn 'An ode to the magic of the unknown, the unpredictable and the unseen; Chasing Fog is both fascinating and gorgeously written. Haunting and beautiful, this surprising mix of nature-writing and memoir draws us into the strange and nuanced world of fog and reminds us of the potency and potential in moments of dream and drift' -- Rebecca Schiller 'Laura Pashby approaches that most mysterious and misunderstood weather with a photographer’s eye and a writer’s curiosity: this clear-sighted and loving ode to fog is a beautiful adventure' -- Alice Vincent 'Pashby’s quest ""to find a depth of meaning and magic"" in fog results in a frequently beguiling and thought-provoking book, one that offers a way of looking at the world and its weather in a subtly different light' * Literary Review * ‘An exquisite piece of nature writing’ * i * ‘Part nature writing, part memoir. It features the same signature writing style that pulls her readers along, as if walking just a step or two behind her as she explores' * Western Daily Press * 'A lushly sensuous exploration of the many possibilities that arise from fog, so vivid that by the end I could feel it clinging to my skin' -- Dr Sharon Blackie"