A Year In The Country: Other Worlds intertwines and cross pollinates the A Year In The Country project's core exploration of wyrd and hauntological culture with journeys to far off lands and seeks out hidden links in the cultural undergrowth. Amongst other wyrd and far off lands it wanders to the Winter of Discontent witchcraft battles of the 1979 television adaptation of M.R. James' Casting the Runes and the timeslip folk horror Cold War dread of Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense's And The Wall Came Tumbling Down... Takes a trip into the surreal dreamscape pop fantasia of Nancy Sinatra's Movin' With Nancy Television special and spends a night in the triple bill genre melding wonderworld of the Scala cinema... Visits the ghosts of city streets via The Sandbaggers, The Gentle Touch and Adam Scovell’s Local Haunts and opens the time capsules of faded history in The Likely Lads and the modernist's photozines... Steps into the shadows of the 1980s secret state cycle of British film and television via Menace Unseen and Bird of Prey and crosses over the thresholds of Kate Bush and Suzanne Cianni’s boundary breaking worlds... Unearths the hidden histories of The Profumo Affair, Mitch Glazer's Magic city and Edward Norton's Motherless Brooklyn and explores the frontier-like autonomous zones of Walter Hill's The Driver, Ryan Andrew Hooper's The Toll and John Michael McDonagh's The Guard... Enters the endless "wilderness of mirrors" espionage games of Andrew Williams' Witchfinder and conjures the lost visions of the future that are buried inside Karyn Kusama's Aeon Flux and Robert Longo and William Gibson's Johnny Mnemonic. The book reflects and records a wide ranging personal cultural journey through the byways, highways, darkened alleys and edgelands of culture and variously visits, revisits and at times brings to the surface the sometimes subterranean themes and culture that have inspired and underpin A Year In The Country’s journeys amongst the wyrd spectral tales of culture. Below is a list of some of the other films etc featured in the book: Television: Tales of Unease’s Calculated Nightmare, Armchair Thriller’s Fear of God (Troy Kennedy Martin), Dark Shadows, Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense’s Black Carrion, The Gentle Touch, Toby Whitehouse's The Game, Bergerac, A.D.A.M., Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais' Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, The Long Firm (Jake Arnott), Mad Men, Abi Morgan's The Hour, Miami Vice (Michael Mann / Anthony Yerkovich) and The Snow Goose. Film: Eyes of Laura Mars, John Carpenter's Someone’s Watching Me!, Peter Yates' The Hot Rock, Welcome to the Punch, John Landis' Into the Night, Stand By Me (Stephen King), The Phantom of Soho, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (John Le Carré), French Exit, Paul Schrader's American Gigolo, White Mischief, Phil Morrison's Junebug, Mike Hodges' Get Carter, The Reckoning, Guy Ritchie's The Gentlemen, The Family Way, The Small World of Sammy Lee, The World Ten Times Over, Saturday Night Out, Edgar Wright's Last Night in Soho, Brett Whitcomb's A Life in Waves, Michael Caton-Jones' Scandal (Stephen Wooley), Ali Catterall and Jane Giles' Scala!!!, The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones and Queen Kong. Music: Trunk Records’ Children of the Stones soundtrack, Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs' English Weather, Gallon Drunk, Tindersticks, The Flaming Stars and Barry Adamson. Books and journals: James O. Davies’ A Year at Stonehenge, Alan Burton’s Looking-Glass Wars, Cathi Unsworth's That Old Black Magic, Peter Mitchell’s Strangely Familiar, John Bulmer’s The North, Your Face Here: British Cult Movies Since the Sixties, Henri Prestes’ We Were Born Before the Wind, Julian Richards’ Inspired by Stonehenge, Natura Journal, Barbara Bosworth and Margot Anne Kelley’s The Meadow, Philip Jodido’s Treehouses and Beth Moon’s Ancient Trees, Ancient Skies. "Stephen Prince is a multimedia artist who's been building his own otherworldly visions of Arcadian England under the name A Year In The Country. Both an exploration of a pastoral past and a rumination on a dystopian present, his recordings marry spectral folk to an electronic otherworld, whilst he has written books of non-fiction that investigate the inner-psyche of our collective histories. He is one of our most authoritative and tireless guides... for any self-respecting hauntologist A Year In The Country is a treasure trove of wyrd delights." Thomas Patterson, Sarah Gregory and Ben Graham, Shindig! "A Year In The Country make excellent music and excellent books about all things dark rural, folk horror, liminal England and hauntology." Stuart Maconie, Freak Zone, BBC Radio 6 "A Year In The Country epitomises the confluence of interest and dark synergy between nature, myth, occultism and ghost traces of hauntological memory." Rob Young, The Magic Box "A Year In The Country is steadily building up a body of work that presents an alternative view of rural Britain and the project's output is consist