Is it any good? I've always fancied reading it
Richard Jeffries house is not far from where we live.
I like him, but I have a special interest in how 19C English and french artists viewed the development and effects of the Industrial Revolution. Some depicted it in a positive light by freeing rural workers from the tyranny of labour while others saw it as the desrtuction of craftmanship and the dignity of self-reliant labour. It's interesting to compare and contrast the French and english views.
Richard Jefferies is in the same camp as William Morris and the Pre-Raphaelites. "After London" has weaknessess in terms of literature, but is still very interesting on several levels. I'd suggest some influence on Tolkien, for example. The book is set in the Thames Valley at a time in the distant future after some kind of unspecified apocalyptic event where the middle ages appear to have retured with similar social structures- all knights, fair ladies, happy retainers and valiant deeds fighting a threatening underclass in the woods. It is the tale of a self-reliant young man who builds his own canoe to set off and seek his fortune to win the one he loves- real fairy tale stuff. Those who know the area can have fun reading the book with the relevant Ordnance Survey sheet at hand to try and trace his routes.
I think William Morris and Richard Jefferies would approve of Bushcrafters to judge from the interest in hand making and doing and self-reliance values so evident in the threads on the BushcraftUK site. The irony is, that having read Jefferies many years ago, I re-discovered him on Kindle where one can get his complete works free. I wonder what he would have thought of that?