"I have come to love the rawness of life out in the country. It speaks to those who are willing to listen to it. And this, I have found, transcends race."
Kiran Sidhu is an evocative and honest writer known for blending personal insight with lyrical storytelling. Her work often explores themes of grief, identity, cultural heritage, and nature. Sidhu's ability to find universal truths in deeply personal moments, connecting rural landscapes with emotional terrain, has resulted in her writing some of the most read articles of the last few years.
She regularly writes for Prospect magazine about rural life and the philosophical implications of this change in her life. She also writes for the I Paper, Guardian, Times and Telegraph. Her most popular article was turned into a documentary that she produced, titled 'Heart Valley', which went on to win a BAFTA. She is most recently the author of her memoir, 'I Can Hear the Cuckoo'.
'A beautiful and poetic meditation on loss, nature, and what matters in life.' — Nigel Warburton on 'I Can Hear the Cuckoo'
Philosopher of the Countryside