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Gibbon, Lewis Grassic (1901–1935)| Scottish novelist. He was the author of the trilogy A Scots Quair, comprising Sunset Song, Cloud Howe, and Grey Granite (1932–34), set in the Mearns, south of Aberdeen, where he was born and brought up. Under his real name he wrote anthropological works and novels, which included Stained Radiance (1930) and Spartacus (1933). |
| Gibbon worked as a journalist in Aberdeen, became a communist, and served in the Middle East during World War I. In 1928 he published Hanno: or the Future of Exploration and after leaving the forces in 1929 he lived by writing until his death. Other books were Niger, The Life of Mungo Park, and The Conquest of the Maya (1934). Diffusionism and the need to recover the lost ‘Golden Age’ pervade his novels Three Go Back (1932) and Spartacus, a powerful historical work. It was under his pseudonym, however, that he made his major contribution to Scottish literature in A Scots Quair. Ostensibly a story of a Scots peasant's education, series of marriages, and her son's involvement in the working-class struggle, it is also an analysis of the transition from a rural to an industrial economy, with its social consequences, and, at a third level, an allegory of Scottish history with the heroine personifying Scotland. |
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| In his great novel Sunset Song , the Scottish novelist Lewis Grassic Gibbon captured the melancholy feeling that the war to end all wars had, in fact, ended everything. com, Solzhenitsyn's Cancer Ward, Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon, Marilynne Robinson's Gilead, Doris Lessing's The Golden Notebook, John Steinbeck's In Dubious Battle and Robert Penn Warren's All the King's Men There's little obvious overlap here with Gordon Brown, who has mentioned Orwell, Milton, Tennyson, Tolstoy, Wordsworth, Camus, Sartre, HG Wells, Lewis Grassic Gibbon and Ian Rankin as among his favourites. [19] Concluding his trilogy with Grey Granite, Lewis Grassic Gibbon creates a complex picture of single motherhood in an industrial city of the 1930s. |
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