Andrew Greig is een Schotse auteur wiens werken zich vaak verdiepen in de diepten van de menselijke ervaring. Zijn schrijven, beïnvloed door zijn filosofische studies, onderzoekt de ingewikkelde verbanden tussen individuen en de wereld om hen heen. Greigs stijl kenmerkt zich door zijn gevoelige aandacht voor detail en zijn vermogen om de nuances van menselijke emoties vast te leggen. Zijn verhalen resoneren bij lezers vanwege hun oprechtheid en diepgang.
When poet Andrew Greig was asked by Scottish mountaineer Mal Duff to join his ascent of the Mustagh Tower in the Karakoram Himalayas, he had a poor head for heights and no climbing experience whatsoever. The result is this unique book. Summit Fever has been loved by climbers and literary critics alike for its refreshing candour, wit, insight and the haunting beauty of its writing. Much more than a book about climbing, it celebrates the risk, joy and adventure of being alive.
Edinburgh basks in an unnaturally warm winter until snow starts falling. A
student disappears, along with his climate research, the national government
close down all communications and Professor Finlay Hamilton realises the link
between his own research into dark matter and the freak weather. Suddenly he
is in the midst of a catastrophic event.
A gamekeeper is found hanging lifeless from a tree near a sleepy Highland
town. A police investigation finds he has been cleverly snared. As the body
count rises, the hunt is on to find the murderer. But the town doesn't give up
its secrets easily and who makes the intricate clockwork mechanisms carved
from bone and wood found at each crime?
At once lyrical and direct, these poems take place in Glasgow, Auckland, the
Scottish Lowlands and Highlands, and above all amid the clear light and bare,
fertile islands of Orkney.
Surely golf is a game for posh people, country clubs and networking businessmen, for unfortunate sweaters, politics and trousers? Andrew Greig grew up on the East coast of Scotland, where playing golf is as natural as breathing. He sees the game as the great leveller, and has played on the Old course at St Andrews as well as on the miners' courses of Yorkshire. He writes about the different cultural manifestations of the game, the history, the geography, the different social meanings, as well as the subjective experience, the reflections between shots. He plays alone, with friends and brothers, with ghosts. The aim is to bring the reader the sense of being there, to experience the physical, emotional and intellectual, that co-existence of inner and outer worlds so characteristic of golf. He is looking for the essence of golf, the pure heart of it, which can be found, Andrew Greig believes, on the free 9 hole course on North Ronaldsay. An indispensable book for golfers and non golfers alike.
Rose Nicolson is a vivid, passionate and unforgettable novel of this most
dramatic period of Scotland's history. It confirms Andrew Greig as one of the
great contemporary writers of fiction.
An adventure, a poacher's handbook, a romance and a moving story of loss and renewal. When three friends decide to revive the challenge of the legendary poacher John Macnab (to take a grouse, salmon and deer from three Royal Estates), they plan for everything - except an unstoppable young woman with a past and time on her hands. Bold, sassy, impulsive, with a taste for a good time, flirtation and strong drink, Kirsty Fowles very nearly gets the better of everyone.
It is 1940 and Britain is at war with Germany. France has fallen and with Britain the next, and most crucial, country in Hitler's path, the threat shifts to unfamiliar terrain - the skies and an epic battle between the Luftwaffe and the RAF. Lenny is a young and inexperienced fighter pilot stationed in Gravesend. After a meeting at a dance with Stella, a radar operator with a more worldly attitude altogether, he falls in love for the first time. She is his eyes on the ground, he is her protector in the air, and as the battle intensifies so their affair gathers pace in an increasingly uncertain time. Class and national barriers lose their distinction and a heady whirl of parties, drinking and promiscuity distracts from the more serious business at hand. Told in intimate, alternate chapters from the perspectives of Lenny and Stella, That Summer matures into a breathtaking novel; a classic love story and a thrilling picture of life during wartime.
When a distillery owner's body is discovered, forensics confirm that he died
of natural causes. DI Corstophine's concerns are raised when the dead's man
eccentric sister receives a message, apparently from beyond the grave. The
police are dismissive until it appears the devil himself is intent on
attacking other family members.