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Naomi Mitchison was one of the most prolific, skilled and original
writers of the twentieth century, whose novels range in setting
from prehistory to outer space. Her work displays a breadth of
knowledge and a sympathetic understanding for humanity: whatever
out time, or our culture, or our beliefs, we are all still very
much the same under the skin. Moira Burgess's SCOTNOTE study guide
covers three of Mitchison's historical novels: Early in Orcadia, a
sequence of stories set in prehistoric Orkney; The Big House, a
children's fantasy of time-travel back to the early nineteenth
century; and Travel Light, following a young Viking girl on a
magical quest. Each novel is examined, and the plots, and the
author's beliefs and influences, are discussed and explained for
senior school pupils and students at all levels.
This collection, which Naomi Mitchison published in 1957, is
recognisably a 'Carradale book', containing as it does vivid and
realistic stories and poems of the landscape and the people.
Mitchison had moved to the village in Kintyre, on the west coast of
Scotland, some twenty years before and was still much involved in
its affairs, supporting the fishing fleet and running her own small
farm. Yet, as Moira Burgess suggests in her Introduction to this
new edition, these thirteen stories and fourteen interspersed short
poems and songs do not make a straightforward, celebratory,
collection. The first five stories have historical settings in
Caithness and Orkney, with the rest set in the contemporary West
Highlands - some drawing on Highland myth and legend. And then, as
Burgess writes, 'tucked modestly and apparently at random' is 'Five
Men and a Swan' - 'a fine story, probably her best, a classic of
Scottish literature'. Mitchison's years of intense involvement with
the community were in fact drawing to an end. From the early 1960s
onwards, she applied her energy and enthusiasm to the cause of the
Bakgatla tribe in the newly independent country of Botswana. Her
writing would turn to African themes, and, in 'a marvellous late
flourish', to science fiction. Seen in this light, the book may be
not so much a celebration as a coda to Mitchison's Carradale years.
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Early in Orcadia (Paperback)
Naomi Mitchison; Introduction by Moira Burgess; Afterword by Isobel Murray
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R541
Discovery Miles 5 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Early in Orcadia was first published in 1987, and consists of five
stories, set hundreds of years apart in time and dealing with
different characters, but connected by their location in a
particular corner of Orkney during the period known as the Stone
Age. Mitchison links them formally by interpolating passages of
fact and explanation between the fictional episodes, and by
speculating in her own voice about what happened in prehistory, as
far as it can be known from archaeological research, and how it
fits in with the world of today. The slightly awkward jumps from
one story to the next indicate that the development of the human
race was not a completely smooth and seamless process. There must
have been significant moments when a highly important discovery or
invention took place. The structure of the book is demonstrating
its theme - that there are sudden advances but just one story
running from the earliest times to the present day, and it is the
story of humankind. From the Introduction.
The south side isn't just a location, a neighbourhood, an area on a
city map. In these brilliantly perceptive novellas, all set in
Glasgow, it stands for the flip-side of the psyche, the darkness
behind the facade. The title story, The South Side, with its echoes
of the Bible John murders, finds Matthew, newly widowed and
remarried, glimpsing and trying to deny events from his past which
he has repressed for years. Machinery deals compassionately with an
elderly woman whom others might describe as a neighbour from hell.
The magical realism of Below takes Belle, a feisty bag-lady, on a
phantasmagorical trip through present and past in search of a lost
village under the city, or perhaps in search of herself. (Belle is
a recurrent character in Moira Burgess's writing, and her companion
Pat Brady features in the novel The Day Before Tomorrow, recently
republished by Kennedy & Boyd.) After you read these novellas,
neither the streets of Glasgow nor the people in them will ever
look quite the same again. Moira Burgess is a novelist, short story
writer and literary historian, born in Campbeltown, Argyll, and now
living in Glasgow. Writing has been the most important part of her
life since childhood and she has published two novels, The Day
Before Tomorrow (1971, reprinted 2009) and Speak, Adam (published
in 1987 as A Rumour of Strangers, reprinted 2009). For some years
she worked mainly on non-fiction, publishing The Glasgow Novel: a
bibliography (3rd edition 1999) and a book on the same topic,
Imagine a City (1998). Author of Mitchison's Ghosts, a study of the
supernatural and mythical elements in the work of Naomi Mitchison,
she is now working on an edition of Mitchison's collected prose.
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The Big House (Paperback)
Naomi Mitchison; Introduction by Moira Burgess
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R491
Discovery Miles 4 910
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Big House is a children's book with much to say to adult
readers. On one level it is a charming and absorbing fantasy novel
with a fairy hill, a Brounie and an enchanted piper all drawn from
Celtic myth and legend, set in a West Highland village which is
clearly Carradale in Kintyre, Naomi Mitchison's home for many
years. On another level it is an examination of the social
relationships in such a village at the time (it was first published
in 1950), and this too is rooted in Mitchison's Carradale life. Su
from the Big House and Winkie the fisherman's son have the same
ancestry and their time-travel adventures show that their
respective positions have changed back and forth over the years.
Why should there be any difference between them now? Moira Burgess
is a novelist, short story writer and literary historian who lives
in Glasgow, but was brought up in Kintyre, the setting of The Big
House. She is the author of Mitchison's Ghosts (Humming Earth,
2008), on supernatural and mythical elements in the writing of
Naomi Mitchison, and is working on a collected edition of
Mitchison's essays and journalism to be published in several
volumes by Kennedy & Boyd.
This groundbreaking book, an important contribution to Naomi
Mitchison criticism,examines three novels,The Bull Calves (1947),
The Big House (1950) and Lobsters on the Agenda (1952),and a
selection of short stories, with particular regard to the
supernatural, fairy-tale and mythical content which is a recurrent
element in her work. Naomi Mitchison (1897-1999) was a highly
practical person -- a social and political activist, a feminist and
a pacifist -- yet was drawn to the idea of an 'irrational'
dimension to life, and reported inexplicable experiences from her
childhood onwards. An awareness of the supernatural and mythical
pervades her writing. This book shows that Mitchison perceived a
strong connection between 'the irrational' and questions of
creativity, sex and fertility, which she saw as being themselves
interconnected and central to her life. Moira Burgess is a
professional writer in the genres of fiction, drama and poetry, and
has published widely on Scottish literature and women's writing. Dr
Burgess is the author of The Glasgow Novel: A bibliography. Her
novels The Day Before Tomorrow and A Rumour of Strangers are
shortly to be reprinted by Kennedy & Boyd, and she is working
on an edition of Naomi Mitchison's collected prose. Like Mitchison,
she comes from Kintyre.
n the fast disappearing slums of the Claggans district of a big
Scottish city, only a few tenements still stand. In this strange
half-world a small group of men and women live out one hot summer
week of their lives. Experience is heightened by the presence of a
maniac among them-a man whom some of them at least must know, a sex
killer who already has his eye on his next victim and is planning
to strike again. But this is in no way a whodunit. It is a warm and
human story of the loves, fears and hopes of simple people: of Mrs
Sheehan, feeling lost and useless with her family grown up and
gone; of old Pat Brady and his sons in the neglected, womanless
apartment opposite, tossed in cross-currents of pity, love and
hate; of Eugene Carty, tied to a tyrannical invalid mother, whose
problems have an unexpected end; of young Bernadette Sheehan, whose
return home after eighteen months working in London, dramatically
changes the course of several lives. Moira Burgess has drawn on her
own experience while working as a librarian in Glasgow to create
the lives and background of her characters, and her natural powers
as a storyteller to weave these into a convincing whole. Moira
Burgess is a novelist, short story writer and literary historian,
born in Campbeltown, Argyll, and now living in Glasgow. Writing has
been the most important part of her life since childhood and she
has published two novels, The Day Before Tomorrow (first published
in 1971) and Speak, Adam published as A Rumour of Strangers in 1987
and reprinted in 2009. For some years she worked mainly on
non-fiction, publishing The Glasgow Novel: a bibliography (3rd
edition 1999) and a book on the same topic, Imagine a City (1998).
Author of Mitchison's Ghosts, a study of the supernatural and
mythical elements in the work of Naomi Mitchison, she is now
working on an edition of Mitchison's collected prose. Douglas
Gifford is Professor Emeritus of Scottish Literature at the
University of Glasgow.
The writing career of Naomi Mitchison (1897-1999) stretched over
some seventy years, encompassing at least seventy works of fiction
as well as non-fiction, poetry and plays. Almost unknown, however,
is the mass of shorter prose pieces - journalism, essays, polemics,
reminiscences - which Mitchison produced during her long career.
There are many hundreds of these pieces, covering a tremendously
wide range of topics, an untapped resource both in Mitchison
biography and in the wider field of social history. Volume 2 in the
seven-volume edition of Naomi Mitchison's Essays and Journalism is
devoted to her writing about the West Highland village of
Carradale, to which she moved in the late 1930s and where she lived
for over sixty years. She writes about many aspects of Carradale:
her farm, the local fishing industry, the big garden which was
particularly dear to her heart, and 'the village and the Big
House'. A long essay, 'Rural Reconstruction', never reprinted
before, is a snapshot of Carradale in the 1940s and a spirited
presentation of Mitchison's dreams for its future. These
digressive, charming, combative pieces show both the practical and
the thoughtful sides of her writing, often to touching effect: she
cared deeply for Carradale and its people, and the book is a
wonderful introduction to a beautiful part of Scotland and a major
writer.
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Speak, Adam (Paperback)
Moira Burgess; Introduction by Valentina Poggi
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R639
Discovery Miles 6 390
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Speak, Adam, formerly published as A Rumour of Strangers in 1987,
is the second novel by the literary historian, Moira Burgess.
Returning to her former home area of Argyll, Speak, Adam is set in
the gossiping town of 'Finavay' where little escapes the notice of
the local tongues. The arrival then of highly-strung Christa
Beresford and her husband Billy, who are attempting to open their
new home as a bed-and-breakfast establishment, is grist to the mill
for the prying and judging nature of Finavay folk. Christa's intent
to blend into the local area is conditioned by her childhood
memories of Finavay and, having recently suffered a personal
trauma, she looks to inappropriate comforts to make some sense of
her present self. These comforts circulate around a group of
itinerant travellers - a young child and a lustful young man
holding particular fascination for Christa. As the novel develops
the imperfect human behaviour patterns of this small town community
emerge. These culminate in an illustration of what happens when the
desires of the physical body take precedence over the intelligent.
Speak, Adam is then an explicit anti-Kailyard portrayal of a West
Highland village which assertively refuses the lure of sentiment
and romanticism but nonetheless is still capable of a measure of
grace. Moira Burgess is a novelist, short story writer and literary
historian, born in Campbeltown, Argyll, and now living in Glasgow.
Writing has been the most important part of her life since
childhood and she has published two novels, The Day Before Tomorrow
(1971, reprinted 2009) and Speak, Adam. For some years she worked
mainly on non-fiction, publishing The Glasgow Novel: a bibliography
(3rd edition 1999) and a book on the same topic, Imagine a City
(1998). Author of Mitchison's Ghosts, a study of the supernatural
and mythical elements in the work of Naomi Mitchison, she is now
working on an edition of Mitchison's collected prose.
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