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A Wee Craic
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Hugh Munro is not to be confused with Hector Hugh Munro (Saki) or Neil Munro (author of the Para Handy tales). More info here: https://bearalley.blogspot.com/2010/1...

I will always be grateful that I got an excellent grounding in 17th and 18th Century British literature as an undergrad at Yale, so I have a head start on Boswell because the context and personalities are familiar.


At a neighbouring library… anticipating a fun read ;))
Books mentioned in this topic
How The Scots Invented Canada (other topics)Life of Johnson (Oxford World's Classics) by James Boswell (other topics)
The Entail: or, The Lairds of Grippy (other topics)
Guy Mannering (other topics)
Para Handy: The Complete Collected Stories (other topics)
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I’m always reading too many books “at once”. I’m currently reading four Scottish books: John Galt’s The Entail: or, The Lairds of Grippy; Sir Walter Scott’s Guy Mannering, in the very helpful Penguin edition; Neil Munro’s Para Handy: The Complete Collected Stories; and Hugh Munro’s Who told Clutha, the first in his series of crime novels about a Glasgow shipyard detective. Hugh Munro also wrote mainstream Scottish novels which are not the easiest to find at reasonable prices, but I’m looking.