Content page · “Northumberland in Print” — built for House of Stories (shown in the Curated Window style)
Northumberland in print · a local reading

Old books from the border country: Morpeth, Northumbria, coast, castle and frontier.

A bookshop should know where it stands. This is ours: the writers Morpeth gave the world, the county’s long love of the printed page, and the odd wonder we’ll never stock but love to talk about. Handled and chosen the same way as everything on the shelves.

— gathered by The Book Gadgie, for House of Stories

Morpeth minds & makers

People this town put into print

Morpeth has always had bookselling in its bones — and a surprising number of its own on the shelves.

William Turner
Morpeth-born · c.1509

The “father of English botany” and author of A New Herball — the book that taught England to name its own plants.

Shelf · Botany, herbals & the Physic Garden
Robert Morrison
Born at Buller’s Green, Morpeth

The first man to translate the whole Bible into Chinese — proof that Morpeth books went right around the world.

Shelf · Language, translation & travel
N. T. Wright
Morpeth-born theologian

Author of more than eighty books on faith, history and the classical world — a modern Morpeth mind with a global readership.

Shelf · Theology & serious non-fiction
Robert Blakey
Morpeth · radical & mayor

Journalist, Chartist, philosopher, angling writer and one-time Mayor of Morpeth — a properly contrary local hero.

Shelf · Politics, philosophy & angling
John Hodgson & Roger Hawkins
Morpeth’s own historians

Hodgson’s A History of Morpeth and Hawkins’ The Origins of Morpeth — the two anchor titles of any Morpeth & Wansbeck cabinet.

Shelf · Morpeth & Wansbeck local history
Emily Wilding Davison
Buried at Morpeth

The suffragette laid to rest in St Mary’s churchyard — a place of pilgrimage, and a window of votes, voices and women writers.

Shelf · Suffrage, biography & women’s writing
Hannah Dorothy Burdon
Morpeth-born novelist

A Victorian novelist worth rediscovering — the sort of forgotten local name a good shop puts back in people’s hands.

Shelf · Rediscovered women writers
Morpeth Antiquarian Society
Local scholarship since 1897

The town’s heritage and research engine — good neighbours, and a route to keeping the shop rooted in real local knowledge.

A partner, not a shelf
Appleby’s Bookshop
Morpeth · 1884 – c.2014

Roughly 130 years of Morpeth bookselling. We follow in a long line — “Morpeth has always had bookselling in its bones.”

Our heritage line

Northumberland’s authors & book people

The wider county on the page

From an eighteenth-century engraver of birds to the crime writers who turned our coast into a set.

Thomas Bewick
Cherryburn · engraver

A History of British Birds — the little wood-engravings that made natural history beautiful and gave illustrated books a Northumbrian soul.

Shelf · Natural history & illustrated books
Basil Bunting
Northumbrian modernist

Briggflatts — the sound of the county set to verse. The serious poetry badge on any Northumbrian shelf.

Shelf · Poetry & landscape
Katrina Porteous & Linda France
Coast & Wall poets

Porteous of the fishing coast, France of Hadrian’s Wall and its ecology — living poetry rooted hard in this ground.

Shelf · Contemporary Northumbrian poetry
Ann Cleeves — Vera
Setting-led crime

The coast, moors and villages as a crime landscape. The easiest, friendliest shelf to browse and to sell.

Shelf · Vera & North-East crime
L. J. Ross — DCI Ryan
Begins on Holy Island

A million-selling series that opens on Lindisfarne — a front-table hook for visitors and locals alike.

Shelf · North-East crime · front table
Children’s & YA
Almond · Lake · Torday

David Almond, Hexham’s Nick Lake and Piers Torday (The Last Wild) — landscape, wildness and award-winners for family browsing.

Shelf · Children’s & young adult
Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
Hexham-born poet

Georgian and First-World-War poetry with a northern accent — quiet, and worth keeping in stock.

Shelf · War poetry
Kathleen Raine & A. C. Swinburne
Formative county ties

Raine’s Great Bavington childhood and Swinburne’s Capheaton family — poetry shaped, in part, by this landscape.

Shelf · Poetry cabinet
Catherine Cookson & Hannah Glasse
Residence & family ties

Cookson, long resident near Corbridge; Glasse of The Art of Cookery, with Northumberland family. Popular fiction and the food shelf, honestly labelled.

Shelf · Popular fiction & cookery

The oldest & the rarest

Books we’ll never stock — but the reason the shop has an aura
Once a world centre of bookmaking

Northumberland made some of the most beautiful books on earth

Thirteen hundred years ago the monasteries of this coast were making manuscripts the world still queues to see. Affordable stock, priceless heritage — both belong to the same story.

The Lindisfarne Gospels

Made on Holy Island around 700 AD, later glossed in Old English by Aldred — the flagship proof that this county was once a centre of the book.

The St Cuthbert Gospel

A tiny red-leather Gospel placed in Cuthbert’s coffin and found in 1104 — often called the earliest intact European book. A book as relic, survival and object of awe.

The Durham Gospels

Gospel-book fragments written at Lindisfarne in the late 7th or early 8th century — the safest strictly-modern-county link of all.

Codex Amiatinus

The oldest complete Latin Bible, and about 34kg of it. A giant of a book — though made in historic Northumbria at Wearmouth-Jarrow, not the modern county.Geography note · historic Northumbria

Did you know?

Small wonders from the county’s bookish past

The kind of thing we’ll have on a card by the till — and, now and then, on the socials.

Keep Calm and Carry On was rediscovered in a box of second-hand books at Barter Books, Alnwick — and went round the world.
Barter Books trades inside Alnwick’s grand Victorian railway station — a destination bookshop with real place-character.
Alnwick Castle played Hogwarts in the first two Harry Potter films — a proper family-browsing hook.
A tiny red book survived in St Cuthbert’s coffin for four centuries — the mood-card for anyone who loves a rare binding.
Aldred wrote Old English between the Latin lines of the Lindisfarne Gospels — helping English learn to speak on the page.
The earliest known English poem, Cædmon’s Hymn, is tied to a Northumbrian cattle-herder. (historic Northumbria)
Bloodaxe Books, one of Britain’s great poetry publishers, sits in Hexham — named after Erik Bloodaxe.
Vera and DCI Ryan turned our coast, moors and Holy Island into bestselling crime — TV-to-book browsing made easy.
Sarah Moss’s Ghost Wall and Mary Stewart’s The Ivy Tree — Northumberland as folklore, landscape and gothic romance.

The shelves this makes

Local knowledge, turned into a shop

This page isn’t just colour — it’s the plan of the place. Every story above becomes somewhere to browse.

Morpeth & Wansbeck
History · maps · walks
Turner & the Physic Garden
Botany · gardening
Suffrage & women’s voices
Emily Davison
Pipes, dialect & folk
Border culture
Lindisfarne, Bede & saints
The old-book aura
Bewick & nature
Birds · engraving
Castles, Percys & reivers
Border warfare · ballads
Hadrian’s Wall & Rome
The frontier
Vera & NE crime
Cleeves · Ross
Old county histories
Better books · cabinet
Impulse£5 – £15 — a book to leave with today.
Better books£20 – £75 — chosen, in good order.
The cabinet£100 + — local, special, rare.

“House of Stories knows where it stands: Morpeth, Northumberland, the border country, the coast, the castles, the Wall, and the long story of books themselves.”

Sources & further reading
Image credits & notes