
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Birlinn General
FORMAT: Paperback
ISBN: 9781841580586
RRP: £6.99
PAGES: 208
PUBLICATION DATE:
July 1, 2001
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Thoughts of Murdo
Iain Crichton-Smith
Murdo Macrae is one of the most extraordinary and fascinating of Iain Crichton Smith’s literary creations. Dismissed from his job as a bank teller, Murdo tries to write, but cannot get beyond the first sentence. Murdo has a wild and fertile imagination, and, much to the incomprehension of his long-suffering wife, Janet, sets out to convert all he meets to his bizarre philosophy and unique vision of the world. Murdo’s surreal and often hilarious antics, however, mask much deeper questions about his inadequacy in the face of social convention and his own spiritual turmoil. It is this juxtaposition of tragicomic elements, together with the fact that Murdo is in so many ways the alter ego of his creator, that brings real poignancy to these stories and confirms Iain Crichton Smith as one of Scotland’s most versatile literary talents of modern times. This volume contains the two publications, “Murdo and Other Stories” and “Thoughts of Murdo.” It also includes another substantial piece, the autobiographical “Life of Murdo,” which is published in book form here for the first time.
Iain Crichton-Smith
Iain Crichton Smith was one of the best-loved and most prolific Scottish authors of the twentieth century. He was born in Glasgow, brought up in Lewis, and attended university in Aberdeen. After starting work as a teacher in Clydebank and Dumbarton, he taught at the High School in Oban until he took early retirement in 1977. He was the recipient of many literary awards and received an OBE in 1980. His widow, Donalda, still lives in Taynuilt, where the couple moved after their marriage in 1977. Stewart Conn was born in Glasgow in 1936. He has been called ‘one of Scotland’s most skilled and wide-ranging poets’. Over recent decades his work, with its distinctive rhythmic and lyrical qualities, has been widely published, anthologized and translated. His works include “The Breakfast Room,” “The Loving Cup,” “Ghosts at Cockcrow” and “Stolen Light: Selected Poems.” He lives in Edinburgh.