Description

Book Synopsis

Lewis Grassic Gibbon galvanised the Scottish literary scene in 1932 with Sunset Song, the first novel of the epic trilogy A Scots Quair, which drew vividly upon his upbringing on a croft in Aberdeenshire to capture the zeitgeist of the early twentieth century and provide a compelling moral mandate for social and political change in the inter-war period. Yet his literary legacy of seventeen volumes produced in his short life, under his own name of James Leslie Mitchell as well as his Scots pseudonym, testify to his versatility, as historian, essayist, biographer and fiction writer. Set against an informed conspectus of the author’s life and times and incorporating substantive new source material, this study highlights his core principles, rooted in his rural upbringing: his restless humanitarianism and his veneration for the natural world. Subsequently, he is seen as a combative writer whose fame in recent years – as cultural nationalist, left-wing libertarian, proto-feminist, neo-romantic visionary and trailblazing modernist – has carried far beyond his native land. In tune with the intellectual climate of the inter-war years, Gibbon emerges as a passionate advocate of revolutionary political activism. In addition, as a profound believer in the overarching primacy of nature, he stands as a supreme practitioner in the field of ecofiction. Coupled with his modernist accomplishments with language and narrative, this firmly establishes him among the foremost fiction writers of the twentieth century – uniquely, one whose achievement has consistently won both critical and popular acclaim.



Trade Review
'William K. Malcolm's book is a fascinating and comprehensive introduction to the life and work of Lewis Grassic Gibbon. Setting Gibbon's writing within the tumultuous historical contexts of the period, Malcolm portrays a hugely talented and hard-working novelist of radical political commitment whose tragically short life culminated in the achievement of A Scots Quair, one of the great novel sequences in twentieth-century literature in English.'
Dr Scott Lyall, Edinburgh Napier University


Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Biographical Outline
Abbreviations
Note on the Texts
1. Life and background
2. Narrative preludes: The Calends of Cairo and Persian Dawns, Egyptian Nights
3. The real stuff of history: Hanno, Niger, The Conquest of the Maya and Nine Against the Unknown
4. Autofiction: Stained Radiance and The Thirteenth Disciple
5. Setting tales upon the truth: Three Go Back, The Lost Trumpet and Gay Hunter
6. Haunted by horrors: Image and Superscription and Spartacus
7. Distant cousin Lewis Grassic Gibbon: A Scots Quair and Scottish Scene
8. Legacy
Notes
Bibliography
Further Reading

Lewis Grassic Gibbon

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by William K. Malcolm


      View other formats and editions of Lewis Grassic Gibbon by William K. Malcolm

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 01/09/2023
      ISBN13: 9781789620634, 978-1789620634
      ISBN10: 1789620635

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Lewis Grassic Gibbon galvanised the Scottish literary scene in 1932 with Sunset Song, the first novel of the epic trilogy A Scots Quair, which drew vividly upon his upbringing on a croft in Aberdeenshire to capture the zeitgeist of the early twentieth century and provide a compelling moral mandate for social and political change in the inter-war period. Yet his literary legacy of seventeen volumes produced in his short life, under his own name of James Leslie Mitchell as well as his Scots pseudonym, testify to his versatility, as historian, essayist, biographer and fiction writer. Set against an informed conspectus of the author’s life and times and incorporating substantive new source material, this study highlights his core principles, rooted in his rural upbringing: his restless humanitarianism and his veneration for the natural world. Subsequently, he is seen as a combative writer whose fame in recent years – as cultural nationalist, left-wing libertarian, proto-feminist, neo-romantic visionary and trailblazing modernist – has carried far beyond his native land. In tune with the intellectual climate of the inter-war years, Gibbon emerges as a passionate advocate of revolutionary political activism. In addition, as a profound believer in the overarching primacy of nature, he stands as a supreme practitioner in the field of ecofiction. Coupled with his modernist accomplishments with language and narrative, this firmly establishes him among the foremost fiction writers of the twentieth century – uniquely, one whose achievement has consistently won both critical and popular acclaim.



      Trade Review
      'William K. Malcolm's book is a fascinating and comprehensive introduction to the life and work of Lewis Grassic Gibbon. Setting Gibbon's writing within the tumultuous historical contexts of the period, Malcolm portrays a hugely talented and hard-working novelist of radical political commitment whose tragically short life culminated in the achievement of A Scots Quair, one of the great novel sequences in twentieth-century literature in English.'
      Dr Scott Lyall, Edinburgh Napier University


      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements
      Biographical Outline
      Abbreviations
      Note on the Texts
      1. Life and background
      2. Narrative preludes: The Calends of Cairo and Persian Dawns, Egyptian Nights
      3. The real stuff of history: Hanno, Niger, The Conquest of the Maya and Nine Against the Unknown
      4. Autofiction: Stained Radiance and The Thirteenth Disciple
      5. Setting tales upon the truth: Three Go Back, The Lost Trumpet and Gay Hunter
      6. Haunted by horrors: Image and Superscription and Spartacus
      7. Distant cousin Lewis Grassic Gibbon: A Scots Quair and Scottish Scene
      8. Legacy
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Further Reading

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