Monday, November 25, 2013
...and the main contenders for the best Scottish novel of the last 50 years are...
... Muriel Spark, Irvine Welsh, Iain Banks and Alasdair Gray according to yesterday's Sunday Herald. (Book Week Scotland 2013 starts today - more details available at the Scottish Book Trust.)
Thursday, November 07, 2013
What is the best Scottish novel of the last 50 years?
Go to the Scottish Book Trust website to cast your vote. Loitering with Intent by Muriel Spark is on the list of favourites.
Bonfire Night, Edinburgh
On
a cold and dark evening, members of the Muriel Spark Society and members of the
public gathered at the National Library of Scotland to hear eminent author
Alexander McCall Smith speak about Edinburgh and literature.
One
could sense the affection for this writer as soon as he appeared. Chairman Alan
Taylor introduced him by pointing out the eerie coincidence of major Edinburgh
writers having surnames beginning with S: Scott, Stevenson, Spark, Smith
…
McCall
Smith began by praising the acuity of Spark’s observations on the city of her
birth, particularly with regard to The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Spark’s views
are timeless, but McCall Smith would later remark on how the past disappears,
how the Edinburgh of Miss Brodie had in many ways disappeared. The attenuation
of the local by globalisation is something to be mourned. He
spoke despairingly of how some modern buildings can detract from local identity
with their sameness. However, some ugly builds can begin to seem more palatable
– David Hume Tower anyone?!
In
a wide detour to Africa, MS remarked how Muriel Spark was born in Edinburgh and
moved to Africa. He, on the other hand, was the opposite: Africa born and now
permanently domiciled in Edinburgh. Speaking
more generally on the literature of place, he praised the sharp, fresh eye Spark
brought to colonial society in Rhodesia. He praised similarly the writings of
Nadine Gordimer and Spark’s friend Doris Lessing.
AMS
remarked ruefully on a literary success can be a mixed blessing for a place.
Savannah, Georgia is often deluged by tourists after the success of “Midnight in
the Garden of Good and Evil”. He
also explored the “reality” of depictions of place in literature. Was his
Edinburgh fiction not too idealised? – a question he was often asked. Yet he
wish to present Edinburgh in a good light, this was quite deliberate. He did
mention that he had darkened one of his stories in the light of such
comments. He
also spoke about population make-up; many of Edinburgh’s residents were middle
class people, involved in office work. Were his fictions so far away from
that? He
treated the audience to an amusing reading from a Scottish woman in Italy on
the malaise of Scottish men; was football really so honestly
admired?
The
evening was a broad, amusing, and often affectionate exploration of literature
and place. Afterwards, Society members and AMS repaired to another place: The
Field Restaurant for a convivial meal, where other culinary, vinous and literary
explorations occurred.
Eric
Dickson
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)