CATEGORY: Fiction from Scotland
LATEST ISSUE: All In
Agnes Owens
An Island Burning by Colin MacIntyre
Aphrodisia: A Q & A with Jean Menzies
Awake Awake by Fiona Mozley
Boyhood by David Keenan
Caledonia Screaming: Scottish Punk 1976 – 1977 by Grant McPhee
Cast Away by Francesca de Tores
Chantelle Streete Reviews: The Miseducation of Caroline Bingley
David Robinson Reviews: Borrowed Land by Kapka Kassabova
Enter Eddie Shakespeare: A Q & A with Barbara Henderson
Everything Everyday by Hannah Lavery
Quite Ugly One Evening: A Q & A with Chris Brookmyre
Rat Race by Callum McSorley
Raveheart by Graeme Armstrong
The Book … According to Andrew Meehan
The Catventures of Sparky and George by Alan Windram
The Driving Seat by Abigail Abbas
The Waterlands by Stephen Rutt
The Weight of Quiet Things
ALSO ON BOOKS FROM SCOTLAND
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David Robinson Interviews: John Lister-Kaye
‘I enjoy stillness. It creeps up on you and becomes almost a force. I’ve had squirrels run over my f …
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Spring 2026 Round Up of Scots & Gaelic Releases
‘Discover Jansson’s uninhibited imagination full of love, kindness, and adventure.’
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Walking Edinburgh’s Lost Railways By Robin Howie and John McGregor
‘In earlier times it was a site where lovers came to relax and dream, hence the beautiful traditiona …
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David Robinson Reviews: The Loch of the Bees
‘The past’s current flows through the characters in his fiction so strongly that it almost becomes t …
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The Nightkeeper’s Apprentice by Jude Reid
‘She’d never seen anything like it. The whole sky was lit up in ribbons of colour – blue, green, yel …
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David Robinson Interviews: Gavin Francis
‘He’s not my GP so I can’t say this for sure, but based on this book – wise, informed, well-written, …
FEATURED AUTHOR:
Ghillie BaŞan
Ghillie BaŞan is an award-winning writer, broadcaster, food anthropologist, storyteller and tourism provider in the Scottish Highlands. She grew up in East Africa, worked as journalist in Istanbul and the Middle East and as a freelance food and travel …
FEATURED PUBLISHER:
Luath Press
Luath Press takes its name from Robert Burns, whose little collie Luath (Gael., swift or nimble) tripped up Jean Armour at a wedding and gave him the chance to speak to the woman who was to be his wife and the abiding love of his life. Burns called one …