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A new edition of a classic memoir and defence of Christian mysticism by the Reverend Murdoch Campbell, author of 'Gleanings of Highland Harvest', 'The Loveliest Story Ever Told', and 'Wells of Joy'.
A new edition of a classic book of Christian teaching from the Reverend Murdoch Campbell, author of 'Gleanings of Highland Harvest', 'Memories of a Wayfaring Man', and 'Wells of Joy'. It is edited by his son, David Campbell.
The second novel to be brought back into print in The Ethel Carnie Holdsworth Series, a collection and study of her writings that explores the author's contribution to British working-class literature.
A new collection of John Galt's four classic novels of rural Scotland in the late eighteenth century, as agricultural society was giving way to the new industrial growth.
A major biography of a meticulous man with a restless and pioneering imagination. His life - as eminent surgeon, early researcher in medical bacteriology, ally of Lister, MP, and intrepid traveller - emerges from family and community memory and detailed archival study. Illustrated with rare images, from family photographs to scenes of the Boer War.
This new translation makes accessible an unusual account, by a soldier and administrator, of 17th century Japan and the civilizations with which it had contact. Short, introductory, pieces to the account itself offer glimpses of the region and period, including piracy, trade and the introduction of firearms into Japan.
In the style and character of its predecessor, 'A Summer in Kintyre', yet rich in differences. The narrative spans April to September 2014, but real time is irrelevant, as the author dips into history and prehistory, evoking people and events associated with the places he visits by bicycle and on foot. 50 black and white illustrations.
In July 1996, Edinburgh College of Art offered a Masterclass with the Italian-Scottish sculptor, Eduardo Paolozzi. The selection process chose 17 students with widely different backgrounds, including Ann Shaw - a former journalist with The Glasgow Herald. This is her diary of the ten days - of chaos and progress - in words and photographs.
This collection of poems, in strict form and in free verse, includes a number published previously - in books, anthologies and magazines - some of them 're-appearing' here with revisions. In this fresh view of his work, John Purser has also chosen to include three of his father's 'Six Sea Poems'. The collection is introduced by Alan Riach.
When first published, this 1887 volume was largely a reprint of "Castellated Architecture of Aberdeenshire" (1849), focussing on the 45 Castles featured as the centres of influence and action in a district rich in historic associations. Robert Bruce, Queen Mary, the Covenanters, the rising of 1715, and the Stuarts all feature in the accounts.
These extracts from the diary of Reverend Campbell, spanning the years 1930 to 1971, are of interest both for his life and times and as one of the few documented accounts of 20th century Christian mysticism. A Preface, Biographical Notes, and footnotes add background information and comment.
Jazz musician Bobby Hackett began his career in the 1930s; it ended with his death in 1976. An extensively researched discography of the vast number of recorded sessions in which he took part during these decades forms the core of this substantial book. It sits amid fascinating biographical insights gathered by the authors.
In a series of fourteen letters, written in 1722 as he journeyed through Scotland, John Macky set out to show that the 'kingdom will not appear so despicable as some parts of the world imagine'. It proved a popular, influential, publication. This new edition is introduced and annotated by Anne M. McKim, with a full index of people and places.
In the idyllic summer of 2013 in Kintyre, the author's journeys by bicycle and on foot were also 'a journey through landscapes of memory and emotion'. The story begins in the rugged south-west, at the Inneans and Largiebaan, and ends in the north-east, at a little loch near Tarbert, with people, places and happenings a-plenty in between.
An extensively annotated edition, and first publication in English, of Stevenson's early, unfinished, comic novel satirising the events and passions, personalities and the predicaments, of the late-Victorian scene.
When it was first published in 1987, this picture of the lives of country folk from the eighteenth century to the early twentieth completed a trilogy on the history and culture of the author's native Kintyre.
This social history of the 'ordinary' people of the south-western peninsula of Argyll, in Western Scotland, has become a classic since its original publication in 1984. It is reprinted here with a new Introduction by the author, a native of Kintyre who knows its geography intimately.
The centenary, in 2014, of the outbreak of the Great War was the prompt to complete this study of the social and playing impact on Ayr United - and the clubs in the family tree - of the Boer War, the Great War, the Second World War and Afghanistan.
This comprehensive and social history of both Club and International Ice Hockey in Scotland, from the late 19th century up to 1940, aims to restore the Scottish game to its right and proper place as a pioneering nation in the early development and organisation of this great world-wide sport.
This study, first published in 1976, is the first to attempt to trace the real relationship between Hogg and his Edinburgh contemporaries, and to show how Hogg developed from poetry to fiction and his major novels.
A centenary edition of the 1913 novel, Miss Nobody, by Ethel Carnie (later Ethel Carnie Holdsworth), widely believed to be the first published novel written by a working-class woman in Britain.
Esther Warden was the 'terror' of West End Fremantle and the most dangerous woman in Western Australia. Lilly Doyle kept company with thieves and rogues and was listed as an 'undesirable'. May Ahern was a 'fallen' woman who lured men into dark street corners, tempting them away from the paths of virtue. Esther, Lilly and May were notorious female criminals in early twentieth-century Perth and Fremantle. Criminalised as drunks, prostitutes and vagrants, women committing offences against good order faced a double punishment for their social and gender transgressions. 'Drunks, Pests and Harlots' takes a trip through the underworld streets of Perth and Fremantle from 1900-1939. It offers a glimpse into the lives of criminal women facing close police surveillance, negative media coverage, strict incarceration and institutionalisation. These lives present historical perspectives on female offenders and the development of public critiques of women who fail to meet the expectations of society.
The Spanish language edition of 'William Kirkpatrick of Malaga: Consul, Negociant and Entrepreneur, and Grandfather of the Empress Eugenie' (ISBN 9781845300715).
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