<p>'By turns funny and <strong>furious, raucous and rueful</strong>, Warner unravels this story of abject failure <strong>with winning aplomb</strong>'</p>
Daily Mail
<p>'Written in<strong> carefully crafted prose shot through with cleverly-deployed alliteration and assonance</strong>, this reimagining of Charles Edward Stuart’s escape from Culloden is a triumph'</p>
- Stuart Kelly, The Scotsman
<p>'Warner <strong>masticates on language joyously</strong>,' 'a brilliantly chewy recreation,' 'It’s easy to imagine Robert Louis Stevenson and Walter Scott <strong>grinning in admiration at these lines</strong>'</p>
- John Quin, The National
<p>'Polygon Books' Darkland Tales series of novellas have been <strong>among Scottish literature's most exciting books of recent times</strong>'</p>
Snack Magazine,10 Best Scottish Books for 2023
<p>'There's something about the author's style and use of language that <strong>draws you into the moment in a very visual way</strong>'</p>
- Ken Lussey, Undiscovered Scotland
<p>'a <strong>thrilling</strong> historical novel'</p>
Scots Magazine
<p>'<strong>Bringing a fascinating historical figure to vivid life</strong>, the author of Morvern Callar and Kitchenly 434 reimagines the last, dramatic flight of Bonnie Prince Charlie in the aftermath of the Battle of Culloden'</p>
Waterstones Says
<p> 'Every bit as <strong>gloriously immersive and vibrantly surreal</strong> as you’d hope'</p>
- James Scudamore, author of English Monsters,
<p>'One of the <strong>most interesting developments</strong> in Scottish publishing'</p>
The Scotsman on the Darkland Tales series
<p>'A <strong>tour-de-force of the author's fertile imagination</strong>... Warner has painted a warts-and-all canvas of a volatile, violent period'</p>
Press and Journal
<p>'I have not read anything quite like it. <strong>Warner's style is captivating</strong>'</p>
Dundee Courier, 9/10 Book of the Week
<p>'So, <strong>so beautifully evocative</strong>... a resounding success of a novella and comes as <strong>highly recommended</strong> by our team'</p>
LoveReading, Book of the Month
<p>'A story that is <strong>lyrical and humane</strong> but <strong>peppered with dark humour</strong>'</p>
Sunday Post
<p>'<strong>visceral, vulgar, vivid, by turns comic and grotesque</strong>, yet with a powerful undertow of elegy and sorrow'</p>
- Rosemary Goring, Herald
<p>'With <strong>lashings of dark, earthy wit</strong>... [Warner] writes beautifully and <strong>injects life into a wide cast</strong> of historical characters'</p>
Scottish Field
<p>'The poetry of the descriptions and the believability of the dialogue amply grip the reader’s attention... <strong>a great pleasure</strong>'</p>
- Ben Bergonzi, Historical Novel Society
<p>'Warner’s work is iconoclastic at the best of times; here, commissioned to write about this time-period as part of a series on Scottish history, he’s been gifted an ideal subject'</p>
Bookmunch
<p>'<strong>a fresh look through fiction at the often sneered-at prince</strong>... Warner seems to relish reassessing his royal 'brigand''</p>
Northern Times, Starred Read
<p>'stupendously earthy, laugh out loud funny in places, visceral writing'</p>
- Sally Magnusson,
<p>'A <strong>terrifying journey through the most inhospitable terrain</strong>, with all its gory and violent staging posts, plagued by midges and Hanoverian soldiers, but where the most insignificant tuft of grass, or heather covered hillock, or the fragility of the light, is<strong> immortalised for its beauty</strong>' </p>
- Cathy MacDonald, Stornoway Gazette
<p>'Warner’s <strong>searing vision of Hebridean hell</strong> reconfirms his role as bard of the Gàidhealtachd’s seamier side, in prose that <strong>draws on lyrical traditions far older, and more resilient</strong>, than the House of Stuart’s claim to lord it over them'</p>
Gutter Magazine
<p>'compulsive, immersive, engrossing, and witty'</p>
Booksthatsusereviews Blog
A battle lost. A daring escape. A long walk into obscurity. The ultimate failure…
In the aftermath of the disastrous Battle of Culloden, a lonely figure takes flight with a small band of companions through the islands and mountains of the Hebrides. His name is Charles Edward Stuart: better known today as Bonnie Prince Charlie. He had come to the country to take the throne. Now he is leaving in exile and abject defeat.
In prose that is by turns poetic, comic, macabre, haunting and humane, multi- award-winning author Alan Warner traces the frantic last journey through Scotland of a man who history will come to define for his failure.
'Written in carefully crafted prose . . . this reimagining of Charles Edward Stuart’s escape from Culloden is a triumph' – Stuart Kelly, The Scotsman
In the aftermath of the disastrous Battle of Culloden, a lonely figure takes flight with a small band of companions through the mountainous landscapes of the north-west Highlands of Scotland. Award-winning author Alan Warner traces the last journey through Scotland of Bonnie Prince Charlie, a man who history will come to define for his failure.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Alan Warner is one of Scotland's best loved literary figures. His debut, Morvern Callar is a contemporary classic; both it and The Sopranos have been made into famous films. He has been nominated for the Booker Prize and many other awards. He teaches at the University of Aberdeen.