Reviews
'[Fergusson's] biography is infused with love and understanding of the man and his work... she writes with a delicate precision', "Maggie Fergusson has captured the essence of the man with insight and elegance." -- Sunday Daily Express , "Clear, detailed, vigilant, droll and beautifully written. . . . Maggie Fergusson conveys with the grace of the born writer." -Candia McWilliam, author,A Case of KnivesandDebatable Land, In Maggie Fergusson, Mackay Brown has had the good fortune to find the kind of biographer with whom every writer should be blessed. She writes lucidly, with restraint and without sentimentality. Her affection and sympathy for her subject shine through but she never shirks from showing his darker side. He was a deeply troubled man cursed with melancholia whose legacy was prose and poetry of luminous virtuosity. If there is a better biography of a 20th century Scottish writer I look forward to reading it., Praise for George Mackay Brown: 'George Mackay Brown has added uniquely and steadfastly to the riches of poetry in English: his sense of the world and his way with words are powerfully at one with each other', This is a truly magnificent achievement. One sign of an outstanding biography is when those who knew - or thought they knew - the subject find surprises and fresh illumination on nearly every page. This beautifully written book evokes both Orkney and the spirit of its master story-teller with a delicate yet unostentatious skill which is the literary equivalent of perfect pitch ... Maggie Fergusson may not have said the last word, but she has stylishly delivered the best and most brilliantly satisfying word so far', "Maggie Fergusson has captured the essence of the man with insight and elegance." - Sunday Daily Express, "A truly magnificent achievement . . . This beautifully written book evokes both Orkney and the spirit of its master story-teller." -- "Herald", "An outstanding biography: deeply researched, sympathetic and full of insight. . . . It brings this extraordinary man to life on every page." --Claire Tomalin, former literary editor, New Statesman and the Sunday Times, "Maggie Fergusson's biography is a deftly written and convincingly craggy portrait of this Orcadian genius." -William Dalrymple, author,The Age of KaliandCity of Djinns, "A truly magnificent achievement . . . This beautifully written book evokes both Orkney and the spirit of its master story-teller." -Herald, "Maggie Fergusson has captured the essence of the man with insight and elegance." -- "Sunday Daily Express", "Maggie Fergusson's biography is a deftly written and convincingly craggy portrait of this Orcadian genius." --William Dalrymple, author, The Age of Kali and City of Djinns, "An outstanding biography: deeply researched, sympathetic and full of insight. . . . It brings this extraordinary man to life on every page." -Claire Tomalin, former literary editor,New Statesmanand theSunday Times, 'He deserves a good biography but has got a magnificent o≠sympathetic, affectionate, but not glossing over his weaknesses', 'There can be few poets anywhere ... writing as pure and unadulterated a poetry as that of George Mackay Brown', "Clear, detailed, vigilant, droll and beautifully written. . . . Maggie Fergusson conveys with the grace of the born writer." -Candia McWilliam, author, A Case of Knives and Debatable Land, "Maggie Fergusson's biography is a deftly written and convincingly craggy portrait of this Orcadian genius." -- William Dalrymple, author, "The Age of Kali "and "City of Djinns", "An outstanding biography: deeply researched, sympathetic and full of insight. . . . It brings this extraordinary man to life on every page." -- Claire Tomalin, former literary editor, "New Statesman "and the "Sunday Times", 'One of the best lives of a poet I have ever read is Maggie Fergusson's George Mackay Brown. She creeps up, not only on her subject, but also on her reader, wooing and cunning. Out of his inner life in a remote place, Fergusson has made a great book about a great man. She is brilliant at understanding the things which did not happen, as well as the things which did, in her subject's life (sex, for example). I seldom feel envy when reading modern books, but I wish I wrote as well as she has done', 'After reading this book every reader will feel at home in the harsh, rewarding world of the Orkneys' , 'From this unpromising hank of material, Maggie Fergusson has fashioned an affectionate and enlightening life of the poet George Mackay Brown.', 'A real treat: a sensitive record of a neglected modern poet that made a convincing argument for his genius', 'An affectionate but clear-sighted biography. Read it alongside his Collected Poems and step into the 'small green world' of [the Orkneys]', 'George Mackay Brown was the most elegiac and profoundly rooted of twentieth-century Scottish writers. Maggie Fergusson's biography is a deftly written and convincingly craggy portrait of this Orcadian genius', 'A stimulating and elegantly written biography, an excellent companion to Mackay Brown's "Collected Poems", which were co-edited by... Archie Bevan, and appeared last year from the same publisher, John Murray.', "Maggie Fergusson has captured the essence of the man with insight and elegance." -Sunday Daily Express , "An outstanding biography: deeply researched, sympathetic and full of insight. . . . It brings this extraordinary man to life on every page." -Claire Tomalin, former literary editor, New Statesman and the Sunday Times, "Clear, detailed, vigilant, droll and beautifully written. . . . Maggie Fergusson conveys with the grace of the born writer." -- Candia McWilliam, author, "A Case of Knives" and "Debatable Land", 'Fergusson's biography of Scottish poet George Mackay Brown ignores the modern trend of looking down gleefully from a dunghill height at the subject.', 'His world, in all its wondrous ordinariness, has been brought beautifully to life by Maggie Fergusson's painstakingly faithful labour of love . . . Exquisite and constantly illuminating ' - Sean O'Hagan, "Clear, detailed, vigilant, droll and beautifully written. . . . Maggie Fergusson conveys with the grace of the born writer." --Candia McWilliam, author, A Case of Knives and Debatable Land, 'An outstanding work of research which no-one interested in George Mackay Brown can afford to be without . . . This is a distinguished example of the art of the biography, beautifully produced in every respect . . . at once sympathetic and professional', 'Outstanding... This is an extraordinarily good book; it is sensitive, witty and has an excellent sense of the vitality of the apparently unimportant details that make up lives and characters.', 'Through his letter and conversations with many friends, Maggie Ferguson discovers that George's life was vivid, courageous and surprising', "Maggie Fergusson's biography is a deftly written and convincingly craggy portrait of this Orcadian genius." -William Dalrymple, author, The Age of Kali and City of Djinns, 'And, behold, a miracle! In one of his many letters (and this book makes me long for a big collected edition of his letters) Brown wrote "There must be a secret wisdom inside us all that directs our lives, often against our wills and desires". Maggie Fergusson seems to have tapped into this secret wisdom. She has drawn a portrait of this man which is both the perfect companion for a rereading of his works and also a fascinating story in its own right...She herself writes with a poet's accuracy. The setting of the Orcadian scene in the opening pages is masterly, but she also has the poet's knowledge of when to produce the telling detail....As well as being a preternaturally acute exponent of what makes Brown's poetry work, Maggie Fergusson is wonderfully wise and deep in her explorations of his emotional and religious life.. 'This is an altogether remarkable book. I know it will be unforgettable, and that it will draw me back to many rereadings. It is that rare thing, a biography whi, This is a truly magnificent achievement. One sign of an outstanding biography is when those who knew or thought they knew the subject find surprises and fresh illumination on nearly every page. This beautifully written book evokes both Orkney and the spirit of its master story-teller with a delicate yet unostentatious skill which is the literary equivalent of perfect pitch ... Maggie Fergusson may not have said the last word, but she has stylishly delivered the best and most brilliantly satisfying word so far', 'This subtle, sensitive, beautifully-written biography is a superb example of an author wholly in tune with her subject', 'This is an outstanding biography: deeply researched, sympathetic and full of insight into George Mackay Brown's magical ability to make poetry out of the simple ingredients of landscape, history and faith, it brings this extraordinary man to life on every page', 'Clear, detailed, vigilant, droll and beautifully written, this biography achieves what only the best accounts of a life can: the scent and texture of the departed subject's spirit, and, in this case, the spirit of a very particular place, which Maggie Fergusson conveys with the grace of the born writer', 'She has drawn a portrait of this man which is both the perfect companion for a rereading of his works and also a fascinating story in its own right...This is an altogether remarkable book. I know it will be unforgettable, and that it will draw me back to many rereadings...It is that rare thing, a biography which is itself a work of literature, the story not merely of a lonely, weird man in an isolated part of the United Kingdom, but of an inner journey which the reader follows enraptured, every bit as exciting and strange as the life-journeys of men of action.'