Stone Voices: The Search For Scotland
By (Author) Neal Ascherson
Granta Books
Granta Books
1st August 2003
25th April 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
941.1
Short-listed for Orwell Prize 2003
Paperback
224
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 21mm
237g
Neal Ascherson is one of Britain's finest writers in an undefinable genre that fuses history, memoir, politics and meditations on places. His books on Poland and his collected essays on the strange Britain to which he returned from Europe in the mid-1980s were deeply influential. In 1995, Black Sea won critical praise in many languages and several literary prizes.
Stone Voices is Ascherson's return to his native Scotland. It is an exploration of Scottish identity, but this is no journalistic rumination on the future of that small nation. Ascherson instead weaves together a story of the deep past -the time of geology and archaeology, of myth and legend with the story of modern Scotland and its rebirth. Few writers in these islands have his ability to write so well about the natural context of history.
Neal Ascherson was born in Edinburgh in 1932. Sustaining a long career in journalism, he has written for The Observer (1960-1990) and the Independent on Sunday (1990-1998). He contributed scripts for the 1974 documentary series World at War and the 1998 series The Cold War. More recently, he has been a regular contributor to the London Review of Books. His own books include The Polish August (1981), Black Sea (1995) and Stone Voices (2002).