Bradt Shropshire (Slow Travel) Guidebook

Shropshire Slow travel guide. Insider insights and holiday tips on everything from the best local pubs and markets to Shrewsbury highlights. Also features UNESCO-listed Ironbridge Gorge, Offa’s Dyke, Severn Valley, Shropshire Hills, The Wrekin, Wenlock Edge, Ludlow, Telford, Welsh Marches, walking and cycling routes, castles and historical sites.

Published:  21st Nov 2025
Size:  20 X 198 mm
Edition:  3
Number of pages:  296
Format AvailableQuantityPrice
Paperback
ISBN: 9781804692639
Preorder now
£16.99

Bradt Shropshire Guide

The latest edition of the only in-depth guide to Shropshire.

About this guide to Shropshire

Part of Bradt’s distinctive, award-winning series of ‘Slow’ travel guides to UK regions, this updated Bradt Shropshire guidebook – now in its 3rd edition – remains the only standalone guidebook to provide in-depth coverage of England’s largest landlocked county.

Although often overlooked, Shropshire is remarkable – “the nearest earthly place to paradise,” according to author PG Wodehouse. The county has been touched by every era of history the British Isles have known: Bronze Age people, Iron Age tribes, Romans, Saxons and Normans all left their marks in hillforts, earthworks, roads, churches, place names and legends, while Shropshire’s position at the once-turbulent Anglo-Welsh borders has left a legacy of castles, castle ruins and fortified manor houses, all carrying stories of clashes and feuds.

  • In the north, flat, fertile plains plus meres and mosses give way to hills, valleys and woodland in the south
  • In the Shropshire Hills (‘quintessential Shropshire’), Church Stretton was popular with Victorians for its Alps-like air and is an ideal walking base for the Stretton Hills and the Long Mynd
  • Bishop’s Castle is home to a ‘poetry pharmacy’ and the country’s oldest working brewery
  • Genteel Ludlow is a nationally famous foodie destination: Britain’s ‘Slow Food capital’ hosts four of the county’s nine Michelin-guide Bib Gourmand restaurants
  • Southeast Shropshire has Bridgnorth, with its quirky cliff railway joining Low Town to High Town, and Much Wenlock, birthplace of the modern-day Olympics
  • The Telford and Wrekin region incorporates the spectacular UNESCO site of Ironbridge Gorge and ten excellent museums.

Writing with intimate detail and insider tips, author Marie Kreft offers detailed descriptions of place, historical overviews, ghost stories and folk tales, plus first-hand accounts from Shropshire residents and a hand-picked selection of restaurant recommendations. Emphasising car-free travel, local produce and characterful accommodation, the guide unapologetically takes you the long way round – through ancient woodland, over bridges and ‘Blue Remembered Hills’, back in time, into castles, churches and interesting pubs – cheerfully and wittily savouring the authentic, offbeat and local.

All in all, this updated Bradt Shropshire guidebook is an indispensable guide to one of Britain’s most scenic and intriguing counties.

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Contents

Going Slow in Shropshire
1 South Shropshire
2 Southeast Shropshire
3 Ironbridge Gorge & The Wrekin
4 Shrewsbury & Mid Shropshire
5 Oswestry & Northwest Shropshire
6 North Shropshire
Accommodation
Index

About the author

Marie Kreft (mariekreft.co.uk) is the author of all three editions of Bradt’s Shropshire (Slow Travel). She is a winner of the Bradt/Independent on Sunday travel-writing competition and has been published in several national titles, including BBC Countryfile magazine, the Independent and National Geographic Food. She has long favoured Slow travel; her most memorable journey was from Singapore to the UK via tuk-tuk, train, bus and the occasional pick-up truck. She lives in south Birmingham, a short hop from Shropshire, which she and her young family consider their happy place for exploring at weekends.

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