'In pages peppered with humour, empathy and kindness, Pullar revisits her pained past and the wild places and creatures that gave her succour'
* Sunday Post *
'Polly Pullar's The Horizontal Oak takes the reader on an unforgettable journey proving that no matter what life throws at us there is the solace of a kestrel, the friendship of an oak - a way to turn to the healing and redemptive powers of the natural world through the most difficult of times. Witty and wise The Horizontal Oak is full of stories, secrets and solace'
-- Jackie Kay
'A remarkable, candid and fearlessly honest memoir, from the hugely talented Polly Pullar, peppered throughout with captivating details of nature in the wilds of Scotland.'
-- Sue Lawrence
'In The Horizontal Oak Polly Pullar skilfully and generously invites us into a life defined by a passion for wildlife and wild places, a life shaped by the addictions and loss of loved ones, a life full of compassion for the complexities of what it means to be human. The characters in this book are magnificent in all their flawed and colourful humanity. This deeply personal memoir is a treasure of insight, empathy and vulnerability, and the glorious people, animals and places within its pages will stay with you for a long time.'
-- Leonie Charlton
'Nature in all its guises and a delightfully dark sense of humour are the forces that unite to overwhelm the consequences of a chaotic parental regime in this extraordinary and occasionally eye-moistening autobiography. Naturalist, writer, photographer and wildlife healer Polly Pullar emerges as a force of nature herself, still nursing some of life's wounds, still smiling at the benevolent moments, still laughing out loud at its jokes. Like the eight-year-old girl watching her aviary who told her, You are so lucky to have owls in your ovaries, thereby summing up the life and the remarkable woman herself.'
-- Jim Crumley
'The Horizontal Oak is a powerfully brave book, confident in its need to address hardship and face important truths. There's no place for excessive sentimentality or exhibitionism here; even the most difficult strands of Polly's story are handled with forthright resolve and a profoundly human warmth which reveal a rare blend of vulnerability and strength'
-- Patrick Laurie