The Gathering Night by Margaret Elphinstone

7 July 2010 00:30

Yet again I have to thank Judith of Reader in the Wilderness for her research, she was looking for Scottish authors and came up with Margaret Elphinstone.

The Gathering Night is set in Mesolithic Scotland and although there isn’t much evidence left of the people, Margaret Elphinstone has managed to weave an entertaining story from what is known of the lives of the hunter-gatherers.

The only definite historic fact is that a tsunami struck the east coast of Scotland around about 6150 BC and she has used this for the storyline.

I’ve been imagining the landscape described in it as I was reading, trying to work out which lochs might have featured in the story. I had decided that the Twin Daughter peaks were probably based on the East and West Lomonds in Fife as they are the only hills like that which I know of. In her afterword the author thanked a lady in Scotlandwell for explaining to her how wild honey was harvested. Scotlandwell is not far from the Lomonds, so that sealed it for me.

As so little is known of the people then, this book is inevitably a type of fantasy writing, but I think that as human beings really don’t ever seem to change much then the whole story is very believable.

I especially liked the reincarnation belief system which Elphinstone gave them and the behaviour of the people after a new baby was born. Obviously it was taken from the way we react nowadays. The baby had to be recognised as someone from the past by someone else in the family, other than the mother.

Of course that is exactly what would have happened. I’m sure we’ve all had experience of the older members of our families leaning over the new baby and claiming that the wee soul is the double of uncle Jimmy or whomever.

Anyway, I’m wandering again. I did enjoy reading this book and I’ll certainly read more of her work in the future.

Light by Margaret Elphinstone

5 May 2010 10:05

Light cover

I’m grateful to Judith at readerinthewilderness who is planning on doing a personal modern Scottish fiction challenge. In the course of her research she came up with the writer Margaret Elphinstone. It is just typical that I had to find out about her from someone in northern New York. Judith has a lovely eclectic book blog.

Anyway, there were only two of Elphinstone’s books in the library and I chose Light. It is one of those large format paperbacks which have very large clear print so the 421 pages don’t take long to read. The book cover is from a painting by Francis Danby (1793-1861) titled Boat by a Lighthouse and I must admit that it was the lighthouse that made me borrow the book.

The story is set in 1831 on a very small island off the Isle of Man called Ellan Bride, which is only inhabited by two women and their three children. One of the women, Lucy, is the sister of the man who had been the lighthouse keeper before he was swept into the sea during a gale, and she has taken over his duties. The other woman is the late lighthouse keeper’s widow, Diya.

Their world is about to be turned upside down as the owner of the lighthouse had died and a more modern lighthouse was going to be built and a male lighthouse keeper employed, making the two families homeless.

However, when Mr. Stevenson of the Northern Lighthouse Company sends two surveyors to Ellan Bride to measure and study the land, Lucy and Diya have to give them hospitality until their work is finished.

I enjoyed this book and will definitely read more of Margaret Elphinstone’s work. She uses quite a lot of Scottish words and some Manx ones but I think it would be obvious from the context what they mean if you didn’t know them. A glossary might have been useful for some people. The ending was quite abrupt and leaves things hanging, which I don’t mind. I just imagine that whatever I want the outcome to be actually takes place. But maybe a sequel is planned for the future.

Some people have been wondering if there is such a thing as Scottish literature, as distinct from English and I think that there are definite differences. Although Elphinstone was born in Kent, she has lived all of her adult life in Scotland. Obviously she threw herself into the Scottish experience as I would say that her writing is Scottish, she even manages the different ways of speaking for the various characters from far-flung parts of Scotland.

For me though, it is the fact that Scottish writers always seem to give a much stronger sense of place and environment than English writers do; so making the setting and landscape just as important as any of the characters. In Light we have the surveyors Archie and Ben measuring and charting the whole island with their chains, but it doesn’t feel like info dumping, as it might have in another writers hands.

Light doesn’t really have that inner darkness (no pun intended) which is prevalent in so much of the older Scottish fiction which I am more used to reading. I don’t know if that is because the author is from England originally and so hasn’t been brought up in an atmosphere of Calvinism which I think influences Scottish writers, even if they are Catholic.

I’ve been wondering if Margaret Elphinstone got the idea to write Light from Bella Bathurst’s book The Lighthouse Stevensons, which I reviewed here.