No Great Mischief
By (Author) Alistair MacLeod
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
4th May 2001
1st June 2001
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
813.54
Winner of IMPAC Dublin Literary Award 2001
Paperback
272
Width 130mm, Height 196mm, Spine 17mm
192g
Winner of the International Impac Dublin Literary Award 'A brilliant and haunting novel' Daily Mail In 1779, driven out of his home, Calum MacDonald sets sail from the Scottish Highlands with his extensive family. After a long, terrible journey he settles his family in 'the land of trees', and eventually they become a separate Nova Scotian clan- red-haired and black-eyed, with its own identity, its own history. It is the 1980s by the time our narrator, Alexander MacDonald, tells the story of his family, a thrilling and passionate story that intersects with history- with Culloden, where the clans died, and with the 1759 battle at Quebec that was won when General Wolfe sent in the fierce Highlanders because it was 'no great mischief if they fall'.
You will find scenes from this majestic novel burned into your mind forever -- Alice Munro
One of the great undiscovered writers of our time -- Michael Ondaatje
The novel is close to being a masterpiece. The characters, the light and the weather, the story itself - its beautiful tone and shape, its harsh and melancholy music - stay with you for days afterwards. The novel is simply breathtaking in its emotional range -- Colm Toibin * Irish Times *
Exceptional... The book is pervaded by the humour and colour; intensely vivid, and very, very moving * Independent *
Alistair MacLeod is a wonderfully talented writer -- Margaret Atwood
Alistair MacLeod was born in 1936 and raised in Cape Breton, Nove Scotia. MacLeod is the author of two short story collections, The Lost Salt Gift of Blood (1976) and As Birds Bring Forth the Sun and Other Stories (1986) and the novel, No Great Mischief, published in 1999. Written over the course of thirteen years, No Great Mischief won numerous Canadian literary awards and the 2001 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. All of his published short stories, plus one new piece, were collected in Island, published in 2000. Alistair MacLeod died in 2014.