The Bull Calves
Naomi Mitchison author Isobel Murray editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Zeticula Ltd
Published:15th Feb '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
"The Bull Calves" was researched and written during the Second World War. This is very surprising, as Naomi Mitchison was tremendously busy at her home in Carradale, Kintyre, keeping open house for evacuees and refugees, running the farm and driving the tractor, organising the local Labour Party, and writing and producing for the dramatic society - and so on. She also wrote a diary for Mass Observation, of more than a million words. But she had to take her time with the novel and plan it more carefully than she usually had time for. She wanted to give Scotland and the world a message, of the need for peace and working together after a bitter war. She chose to write about the aftermath of the Jacobite rising of 1745, and set her novel at Gleneagles, on the Highland line, with her characters her own ancestors. A very personal prefatory poem indicates that the whole operation was very close to her heart, and the ensuing novel is her best historical novel, and still topical today. With an Introduction by Isobel Murray.
'It starts off so slowly that I almost gave it up ... But then one of the younger girls starts asking her Aunt Kirstie about her girlhood, and her boyfriends, and gradually it takes off. And then I was gripped, because suddenly you're introduced to Jacobites and witches and Red Indians and traitorous cousins, and it's great.' Anef's Journal, 2018.
ISBN: 9781849210256
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 31mm
Weight: 796g
548 pages