Never too Late to Read Classics discussion
Archive Buddy Reads
>
2022 Buddy Read: Scottish Authors
message 251:
by
Kathy
(new)
Mar 06, 2022 03:48PM

reply
|
flag

I didn't notice - as I'd never heard of him! But thanks to you Melanie I've now downloaded from Amazon a free copy o..."
Thanks for your post. I have just downloaded a free copy also. :)


I'm at about the same Trisha and enjoying it quite a lot. I realise how slow a reader I am and with the passage of Scottish dialect it is slow going at times. Press on.



Well done Trisha, and I'm delighted you enjoyed it. I'm hoping to finish it today....I've enjoyed the comic elements - particularly the running thread about the seal!

There are similarities between the character of the Antiquary and Scott himself, which maybe added to his fondness for it.
Personally, I like the conclusion by the critic and author, A N Wilson, that the book celebrates "good dinners, old books, a comfortable house, and a view of the sea" as well as long conversations with good friends.
Sounds good to me.
I've made some progress in The Antiquary and found it a refreshing change after Ivanhoe and some of the others I've read. I enjoyed Waverley and Rob Roy once I got past the long introductory chapters.


Thank you for telling me this about Waverley and Rob Roy. These are on my list but i really need to finish Barnaby Rudge because i am so involved now!!
I want to read Waverley because it was mentioned in A Hero of Our Time. Recently finished The Art of Writing and the Gifts of Writers and he mentioned something about Waverley that I want to remember. "Solitude and abandonment to the imagination in youth will render a man easy prey to those who wish to exploit him.".

I'm loving the names of some of the minor characters in The Antiquary-like Mr. Dousterswivel. I like the fun side of Scott in this novel. And our young hero-Mr. Lovel.
And of course, the title character as well!
And of course, the title character as well!





Now, Melanie, Miss Buncle is described as middle-aged with some suggesting she is in her late 30s. That doesn't seem elderly. The fact that she is also 'frumpy' does not make her older in years. As an "elderly" 68 year old myself, she seemed young to me.
I think I have the same book cover as you


Seriously, though, I am glad you are enjoying yourself.

Brian, yes, the book cover used on Goodreads is the one of the reasons I was thinking she's older than 40. As I finish the book I'll look for more clues.
There are two more books about Miss Buncle-Miss Buncle Married and The Two Mrs. Abbotts, and they're fun too.
I discovered D.E. Stevenson books in my final year of high school and since then have read every book that I could get out of the library, which a lot. I'm glad they're being reissued so that the next generations of readers will discover them too.
I discovered D.E. Stevenson books in my final year of high school and since then have read every book that I could get out of the library, which a lot. I'm glad they're being reissued so that the next generations of readers will discover them too.

I also have considered reading Vittoria Cottage (Deering Family #1) because so many GR friends seem to have read it along with other authors in the Furrowed Middlebrow editions

In January of 2022 Dean Street Press came out with new editions of 11 more D.E. Stevenson novels. http://furrowedmiddlebrow.blogspot.co...



I wonder if the fact that it was set in time so close to his own life made him more relaxed and at ease when writing it?
I got that impression, John. I liked the jokes about the wigs-I guess the Antiquary was one of the last wig-wearers.

This is my 4+ star review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I very much enjoyed reading it. I also enjoyed the ending, which was a relief as the book had a brief moment of threatening to become a bit tiresome at the 2/3 or 3/4 point. The following is a spoiler reply to one of your earlier comments, Melanie:(view spoiler)

This is my 4+ star review: https://www..."
Hi Brian, When I click on your review link it takes me to a review of Freakonomics by somebody else. Do you want to try that again? And I agree with your last statement in the spoiler.

Mine did too! Oops! I will try again.
In the words of the great philosopher Bullwinkle, 'This time, for sure!" https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



This is my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
I liked your review, Brian, and the point about Sunset Song being a surprising winner of a popular poll is very true, and there were a couple of the top 10 that this could also apply to -
10. James Hogg's The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
9. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
8. Knots & Crosses by Ian Rankin
7. Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh
6. Harry Potter & The Philosopher's Stone
5. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
4. The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan
3. Lanark by Alasdair Gray
2. The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks
1. Sunset Song by Lewis Grassic Gibbon

Mine did too! Oops! I will try again.
In the words of the great philosopher Bullwinkle,..."
Thanks for the review, Brian! That was nice.

Pink Sugar by O. Douglas (sister of John Buchan)
Consider the Lilies by Iain Crichton Smith re: the Highland Clearances
She also mentioned books by Mary Stewart and Rosamund Pilcher. Now, John, I'm going to propose that even though they weren't Scots, they largely wrote and lived in Scotland. I was thinking of Wildfire at Midnight (1956) by Stewart and The End of Summer (1971) by Pilcher.
Would these by acceptable?

After reading it, though, I think Sunset Song is a very appropriate choice as a representative Scottish novel. While its writing style is more lyrical and streamily poetic than one finds in 'popular' novels, its subject matter and story effectively portrays life in a very Scottish area or town. Many other Scottish novels, both on and off the top 10 list, do not portray life in Scotland. Even ones that do, like Trainspotting and The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, are portraits of a narrower group, such as young urban drug users or young urban girls' school attendees and faculty, than what is shown in Sunset Song,
Sunset Song's setting seems a good representative of the Scottish rural and village setting. A good urban novel of Edinburgh or Glasgow might best reveal the other part of Scotland. Perhaps, the #3 ranked Lanark or the recent Shuggie Bane would fit the bill. I was a bit surprised that nothing from R.L. Stevenson or Walter Scott made the top 10, but I really shouldn't be surprised when people don't value classics that much.

[bo..."
Consider the Lilies is a good choice, Melanie.
Stewart married a Scot, and lived here from 1956 until her death.
Similarly, Pilcher lived here from just after her marriage, until her death.
So I would say that both are definitely acceptable.
I'm sure one of Stewart's "Merlin" books is in one of the group challenges later in the year - in Futuristic, etc.
I'd never heard of O. Douglas/Anna Buchan, but I will now. I liked the quote from her Obituary in a Scottish newspaper -
"It has been objected that the people of her books are too "pleasant," but, at a time when fiction was passing through an ultra-realistic phase, this pleasantness was a relief to many readers."
I think in 2022 we could all do with a bit more pleasantness!!!!

In the most recent newsletter from Scotland's People they featured three Scotish authors, one of them Mary Stewart. Sadly, newsletter now deleted but I think one of the others was Catherine Sinclair, who much to my delight is credited with having public water fountains and public seating installed in her efforts to enhance the city of Edinburgh. She definitely qualifies for our reading. I read a Mary Stewart at Christmas time and now on looking it up realised it was originally written in 1954. Some of her work will qualify. I love her work and have reread many over the years.



I'm glad you liked it Kathy, and I thought the ending pulled everything together nicely.


I listened on audible and cannot recommend it highly enough, read by Tilda Swinton, with an afterword by Robert Macfarlane and a bonus essay by Jeanette Winterson. 5 stars!

Books mentioned in this topic
A Far Cry from Kensington (other topics)The Citadel (other topics)
Sunset Song (other topics)
A Far Cry from Kensington (other topics)
Miss Buncle Married (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Muriel Spark (other topics)A.J. Cronin (other topics)
Muriel Spark (other topics)
George MacDonald (other topics)
Margot Bennett (other topics)
More...