Fans of "Game of Thrones", and the "A Song of Ice and Fire" books it was based on, will remember the most shocking episode in the whole series was that of "The Red Wedding" which (no spoilers) features a brutal and bloody betrayal. George R. R. Martin is a big fan of Scottish history and has made it clear that the inspiration for that storyline came from two events; the lesser-known "Black Dinner" of 24th November, 1440, and the more widely-known story of the massacre at Glencoe of 13th February, 1692. It is the massacre of Glencoe which is the subject of this book, written by John Buchan.
Buchan is most famous for writing the adventure/ thriller/ spy-story "The Thirty-Nine Steps", but, amongst his many other achievements, he was also President of The Scottish Historical Society, and it is the combination of his knowledge and interest in Scottish history, combined with his ability to tell a good yarn, which makes this book so readable. Buchan was a master at creating "characters" and it is his thumbnail character descriptions of the people involved, combined with excerpts from their letters, which makes the story come alive. Melville had a "big head, ashen face and mean presence", Tarbat was "handsome and genial, but slippery, like all of the Mackenzie blood", Breadalbane was notorious for his avarice, "but could be friendly when it cost him nothing."
The schemes and planning of men such as these, leading to the events of the 13th of February and their aftermath, are laid bare in this gripping account of one of Scotland's greatest tragedies.