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Robin Jenkins

    Reconnu comme l'un des plus grands écrivains écossais, Jenkins est l'auteur de plusieurs romans marquants. Son œuvre explore constamment des thèmes profonds tels que le bien contre le mal, la perte de l'innocence, la fraude, la cruauté et la rédemption. Ses récits sont souvent empreints d'ambiguïté, n'étant rarement exactement ce qu'ils semblent être à première vue. Jenkins, par son style distinctif, a créé des histoires profondément résonnantes qui explorent les complexités de la condition humaine.

    Poor Angus
    Dust on the Paw
    The Changeling
    Childish Things
    Love is a Fervent Fire
    The Sardana Dancers
    • The Sardana Dancers

      • 373pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      3,0(2)Évaluer

      Set in a small Spanish seaside town, this work includes many personalities: twins Jonathan and Maddy Braxmead, unsure of their creative talents and in crisis; John Lynedoch, an aggressive, working-class Glaswegian painter; beautiful Barcelona student, Montserrat, who arouses ferocious jealousy, and her brother, a well-known Catalan patriot.

      The Sardana Dancers
    • Love is a Fervent Fire

      • 264pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,8(11)Évaluer

      Hugh Carstares, badly wounded in the war that cost him his wife, seemed to himself and to his superiors in the forestry service only the burnt out wreck of a hero.

      Love is a Fervent Fire
    • Childish Things

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      2,5(2)Évaluer

      Renowned for exploring complex themes such as good versus evil, innocence lost, and the nuances of human nature, Jenkins' novels are marked by their ambiguity and depth. His body of work, which includes notable titles like The Cone Gatherers and Guests of War, showcases a profound understanding of fraudulence, cruelty, and redemption. Starting his literary career at thirty-eight, he published over thirty novels by the time of his passing in 2005, solidifying his status as one of Scotland's greatest writers.

      Childish Things
    • The Changeling

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,9(44)Évaluer

      The modern Scottish classic; a heartbreaking, tragic portrait of an unexpected relationship. Introduced by Andrew Marr

      The Changeling
    • Dust on the Paw

      • 454pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      3,7(19)Évaluer

      Set in Afghanistan, this novel features Abdul Wahab, an Afghan science teacher, eagerly anticipating the arrival of his British fiancee, Laura Johnstone. Prince Naim sees the marriage as a symbol of a successful union between East and West, and in his hurry to cement this union, promotes Abdul into a position of power he is far from ready for.

      Dust on the Paw
    • Poor Angus

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,7(14)Évaluer

      Poor Angus centres round a struggling painter, Angus McAllister, who has returned to the seemingly idyllic Hebridean island of his birth in the hope that it will inspire him to create his masterpiece. His privacy is invaded by Janet, a visitor with relatives on the island. schovat popis

      Poor Angus
    • Fergus Lamont

      • 337pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,7(22)Évaluer

      From his origins as an illegitimate child in the slums of Glasgow, Fergus Lamont sets out to reclaim his inheritance and to remake his identity as soldier, poet and would-be aristocrat.

      Fergus Lamont
    • THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL NEVER RESTED: IN THE WORLD, AND IN EVERY HUMAN BEING, IT WENT ON

      The Cone-Gatherers
    • The Missionaries

      • 229pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,1(11)Évaluer

      Sollas, a remote island off Scotland's west coast with a well-known religious history has been invaded by a group of Christian sectarians who claim a right to live and pay reverence at the famous stone where St Solla landed and which formed the centre of their ancestors' worship.

      The Missionaries
    • When the beautiful pearl-fisher, Effie Williamson, arrives in a rural Scottish village, with her grandparents and siblings, the residents react in many different ways. When the religious, gentle Gavin Hamilton takes the family into his home, a difficult love blossoms gradually between Effie and Gavin under the scrutiny of the watchful locals.

      The Pearl Fishers