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  • - An Anthology of Nineteenth-century Gaelic Verse
     
    389

    The Highlands and Islands of Scotland experienced massive changes during the nineteenth century. Economic restructuring, introducing sheep and deer and encouraging clearance and eviction, is the best known change, but it was by no means the only one.

  • - Anthology of Scotland's Gaelic Verse to 1600
     
    419

    Duanaire na Sracaire is the first anthology to bring together Scotland's Gaelic poetry from the millenium c.600-1600 AD, when Scotland shared its rich culture with Ireland.

  • - The Springboks in their Own Words
    av Gavin Rich
    265,-

    The leaping Springbok on the green jersey of South Africa is one of the most iconic emblems in world rugby. At the same time, no symbol in world sport has ever done so much to divide - and then unite - a nation.

  • av Jim Carruth
    159,-

    Almost eighteen years in the making, this collection is a love poem to a rural community in Scotland. The freshness of its language brings the daily grind, its joys and harsh realities, to vivid life; its final elegies form a moving testament to a lost generation of family, friends, farmers and farms.

  • av George Mackay Brown
    189

    First published in 1969, An Orkney Tapestry, George Mackay Brown's seminal work, is a unique look at Orkney through the eye of a poet and a celebration of Orkney's people, language and history. Unavailable for many years, this new edition has a specially commissioned Introduction written by Kirsteen McCue and Linden Bicket.

  • av Tim Kirby
    95,-

    Scotland is renowned for the huge range of its wildlife, which comes in all shapes and sizes. In this book Tim Kirby introduces 45 of them, from the iconic red deer and golden eagle to the Highland cow and ubiquitous midge.

  • - The Nation's History by the Women Who Lived It
     
    189

    A history of Scotland through the lens of the historically pivotal women. St Margaret, Mary Queen of Scots and Judy Murray all feature.

  • - The Story of the Grassmarket Community Project
    av Richard Frazer
    139

    An energising book filled with individual inspiring and motivating stories of overcoming extreme adversity.

  • - Scotland and the First World War
    av Trevor Royle
    189

    Provides an account of how the war changed Scotland irrevocably by exploring a wide range of themes, including the response to the call for volunteers, the performance of Scottish military formations in 1915 and 1916, and the militarization of the Scottish homeland, and the resistance to war in Glasgow and the west of Scotland.

  • - John Gregorson Campbell's Superstitions of the Highlands and the Islands of Scotland and Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands
    av John Gregorson Campbell
    419

    Introduces the reader to the supernatural: fairies, witches, and, ghosts as well as general superstitions and the beliefs and rituals of the traditional calendar. This book details Campbell's work with explanatory notes and a biography, supported by bibliography, maps and index.

  • av Anne Lorne Gillies
    549

    Gaelic Scotland is one of the world's great treasure-houses of song. This anthology gathers together music and lyrics from all over the Gaelic-speaking Highlands and Islands - an extraordinary tradition that stretches in an unbroken line from the bardic effusions of ancient times to the Celtic fusions of vibrant young Gaelic musicians and poets.

  • - A Historical Guide
    av David Caldwell
    195,-

    Part of Birlinn's series of Scottish Historical Guides, Dr. Caldwell's book draws on a great deal of primary research and local knowledge to create a detailed account of the history of these relic strewn Hebridean Islands. Essential reading for local and tourist alike.

  • av A.R.B. Haldane
    185

    One of the great classics of Scottish history, The Drove Roads of Scotland interweaves folklore, social comment and economic history in a fascinating account of Scotland's droving trade and the routes by which cattle and sheep were brought from every corner of the land to markets in central Scotland.

  • av John Love
    315

    In 1697 Martin Martin, a Gaelic-speaking scholar from Skye, travelled to St Kilda to study the island's flora and fauna and to learn about the now extinct great auk. Much of the information that he gathered during this expedition was relayed to him by the islanders.

  • av Eilidh Muldoon
    139

    Colouring book based on the city of Glasgow

  • - Landscapes in Stone
    av Alan McKirdy
    109

    Longlisted for the Highland Book Prize 2019The rocks of northern Scotland tell of turbulent events involving continental collisions that unleashed cataclysmic forces, creating a chain of mountains, the remnants of which we see today on both sides of the Atlantic. Geologists from Victorian times onwards have studied the area, and some of the most important geological phenomena have been established and described from the rocks that built these stunning landscapes.In this book, Alan McKirdy makes sense of the many and varied episodes that shaped the familiar landscape we see today. He highlights a number of fascinating geological features, including the Old Red Sandstones of Cromarty and the Black Isle, which carry the secrets of life during 'the Age of Fishes', and the thin sliver of fossil-bearing strata which hugs the coast from Golspie to beyond Helmsdale that dates back to Jurassic times and which records the time when dinosaurs roamed the Earth.

  • - Long Distance Guide
    av Peter Evans
    245

    An overview of the need-to-know information for hiking along the Aberdeen to Ballater spanning Deeside Way. Provided in weatherproof plastic wallet.

  • - Two Lives Apart
    av Willie Orr
    149

    In 1974 the leader of the Ulster Unionists in Westminster disappeared. At the same his son, a hill shepherd in the West Highlands of Scotland hds a disabling tractor accident and decided to enrol in Stirling University where he embraced socialism. Willie Orr was that son.

  • - An Autobiography
    av George Mackay Brown
    139

    George's memory is inseparable from Orkney, where he was born the youngest child of a poor family. Tuberculosis framed George's early life and kept him in a kind of limbo. He discovered alcohol which gave him insights into the workings of the mind. By the time of his death in 1996 he was recognised as one of the great writers of his country.

  • av George Mackay Brown
    149

    Thorfinn Ragnarson is a daydreamer of elaborate historical fantasies. In this beautiful and haunting novel Thorfinn becomes a Viking traveller, a freedom-fighter for Bonnie Prince Charlie and the colleague of a Falstaffian knight who participates in the Battle of Bannockburn.

  • av George Mackay Brown
    139

    "Vinland", George Mackay Brown's fourth novel, follows the turbulent life of Ranald Sigmundson, a young boy born into the Dark Ages, when Orkney was torn between its Viking past and its Christian future.

  • av George Mackay Brown
    145

    Bestowed at birth with two gifts, an ivory flute and a bag of silver and gold coins, a young girl wanders through time. She is destined to pursue the dragon of war and before he consumes the world in flames, subdue him not with violence but music. Moving across the battlefields from East to West, the girl bears witness to the suffering and brutality of war throughout history ...

  • av George Mackay Brown
    135

    Greenvoe, the community on the Orkney Island of Hellya, has existed unchanged for generations. George Mackay Brown has recreated a week in its life, mixing history with personality in a sparkling mixture of prose and poetry.

  • av Carol Foreman
    209

    Traces Glasgow's history primarily through buildings which played a central part in the city's story at one time or another. Beginning with the Medieval age, the book contains four parts spanning more than eight centuries: the Medieval town; from Reformation to the Act of Union; the Merchant City, and the Victorian Age.

  • av George Seton
    209

    The small island archipelago of St Kilda, which rises majestically from the stormy waters of the North Atlantic, has a magic and allure which is both enduring and inexplicable.

  • - An Adventure Through Scottish Football
    av Aidan Smith
    159,-

    In Bring Me the Sports Jacket of Arthur Montford, Aidan Smith mines Scottish football history for quirk, strangeness and charm, on a journey that takes him from Albania to Albion Rovers, great players are celebrated and so are great characters.

  • av Jim Carruth
    175

    Bale Fire is a book in three cycles. The first explores the darker side of communities in decline. The middle is a transposition of elements and characters of the Odyssey to a Scottish hill farm and its neighbours. The final part looks at the idea of harvest and loss. Jim Carruth offers here both a celebration and an elegy.

  • - In the Footsteps of Monks, Miners and Martyrs
    av Ian Bradley
    189

    The minister and broadcaster gives a history and reflection on the Fife Pilgrim Way, approaching it as a site of both religious and secular significance.

  • - Scotland's Silent Revolution 1760 - 1830
    av Peter Aitchison & Andrew Cassell
    169

    This book reflects pioneering historical research which establishes the Clearances as part of a wider process which affected the whole of Scotland.

  • - A Pocket Guide in 101 Moments, Stats, Characters and Games
    av John Griffiths
    158,99

    English Rugby 101 is a compendium of fascinating facts, stats, stories, personalities and trivia - perfect for all fans of English rugby.

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