Lifelines with Julian Hoffman
In this episode Jason König interviews Julian Hoffman [https://julian-hoffman.com/] about living in the mountainous region of Prespa in northern Greece, and about his latest project on the Aoos river.
Julian is the prize-winning author of The Small Heart of Things (2012), Irreplaceable: The Fight to Save our Wild Places(2019), and most recently Lifelines: Searching for Home in the Mountains of Greece (2025), which tells the story of his move to Prespa, where he has lived for the last two decades.
We start by talking about how Julian’s fascination with mountains first developed on a trip to the foothills of the Himalayas in India.
Julian then gives us a sketch of the Prespa region, with its ancient lakes ringed by mountains, stretching across the borders between Greece, Albania and North Macedonia. He describes the hospitality he and his wife received when they moved there from London, the changing relationships between the local population and the mountain landscapes they live close to, and the animals and especially the birds that are such a powerful presence in the experiences he describes in Lifelines.
In the second half we discuss the Aoos/Vjosa river, the last surviving large, free-flowing river in Europe, which runs through northern Greece and Albania. We talk about the amazing variety and environmental richness of the waterways across the whole Aoos river basin, and Julian describes a visit to the Sarantaporos (a tributary of the Aoos) in January 2026 to see the river in flood.
Finally we discuss the challenges facing the region – including not just depopulation and the effects of climate change, but also the policy of siting wind turbines in mountain landscapes that are ‘largely pristine, biologically alive, and hugely ecologically important’. We also talk about hope for the future, especially Prespa’s character as a place that can transcend borders and national differences.
This episode was edited by Zofia Guertin.
To learn more about the Mountains of Greece project you can visit our website https://mountainsofgreece.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/ [https://mountainsofgreece.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/], or follow us on Bluesky @mountainsofgreece.bsky.social.
For the broader Mountain Stories, Mountain Futures project please visit our website https://msmf.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk [https://msmf.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/], or follow us on Bluesky @futuremountain.bsky.social.