Miriam Margolyes shares her Scottish roots

TV chatshow favourite Miriam Margolyes delves into her Scots family background this weekend. She joins The Big Scottish Book Club to recount the story of how her family moved to Scotland in the late 19th century, and settled in Glasgow. National treasure Miriam looks back on her extraordinary life and working with everyone from Scorsese…

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Space – bringing the final frontier down to Earth

Space – the final frontier, according to the boss of a fictional Scottish starship engineer. Oor Big Braw Cosmos is exactly the kind of book that Montgomery Scott would want to read, combining elements of cosmic science with the Scots language. This book is fascinating collaboration between eminent Scots astronomer John C. Brown and renowned…

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When the capital goes to work – through the years

Edinburgh is a city that’s different from the rest of the UK. It has its own feel about it – so few cities can claim to have a stunning centrepiece like the castle at its heart. It has its festivals in August; it has a proud history; its own myths and legends; and it has…

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Charity farming books raise over £100,000

A series of three light-hearted books have raised over £100,000 for RSABI, the charity supporting people in Scottish agriculture. The books, which are the perfect Christmas stocking fillers, were compiled by farming journalist Andrew Arbuckle with his late brother John also working on the first two titles. With all profits from the books going to…

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An insightful look at ravens – in art and legend

Crows, ravens, rooks and magpies – all birds that tend to get a hard time in myths and stories over the years. They usually tend to be associated as harbingers of doom and oncoming death – there’s no denying that these birds, corvids, play a large role in the human imagination. We keep ravens in…

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A fascinating look around the Scottish coastline

One of the benefits of lockdown was that people who normally struggled to find time to write were finally able to do so. Kevin Scott, from Newton Mearns near Glasgow, took full advantage of this, to write a fascinating insight into Scotland’s many harbours. Volume two runs to 518 pages, covering the area from the…

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An insight into Scotland’s lost love of pewter

Pewter was in everyday use in most households, churches and places of commerce in Europe for hundreds of years. But it fell out of favour in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as new materials and manufacturing methods became available. The pewter wares of Scotland have for a long time interested collectors, who have been attracted…

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An amusing look at 50 of the ‘worst’ Scots

Acclaimed writer Allan Brown has amassed a hilarious collection of portraits of 50 of the most prominent offending villains and numpties. He cast a sharp over those who he considers have hindered rather than helped Scotland throughout its history. The list includes historic ambassadors such as Robert Burns to popular personalities such as Billy Connolly.…

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A cool read as writer goes on the search for snow

Like a pirate in search of treasure, Iain Cameron scours Britain’s mountains for patches of surviving robust snow. From the opening story of Cameron battling a ferocious snowstorm in the Highlands to seek out an elusive patch of snow, I was enthralled. Yet, what I didn’t expect to feel was moved. Cameron’s childlike wonder and…

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Past and present collide in a thrilling murder mystery

Set against the backdrop of the Scottish Highlands, A Rattle of Bones is a tale of injustice and mystery, and the echo of the past in the present. This cleverly spun story follows Skelton’s protagonist, journalist Rebecca Connelly, as she investigates a tale of injustice which has eeire parallels with that of a man wrongly…

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