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17 oeuvres 103 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Comprend aussi: Donald Murray (2)

Œuvres de Donald S. Murray

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Many sentences are poorly written - however the story narrative is made interesting. And jeremy is mentioned on p 201!
 
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MiriamL | Aug 15, 2021 |
Normally the first thing that comes to mind when I think of the Dark Stuff is Guinness. What Murray thinks of though, is peat. This decomposed vegetable matter is formed on acidic and very wet ground, but when dried can then become fuel and is the strong scent in the delightful Islay whiskies. He had grown up with them in Scotland all around him and even fell in a few. But these moorlands that make up swathes of our uplands in our country and Ireland also exist in Europe and all around the world.

These moorlands have affected and influenced people for hundreds of years. Not only have they provided the fuel to heat and cook with, but they have been a focal point for ritual and darker matters in the past as well as inspiration for stories, art, poetry and folk tales. Murray takes us on a path through his own personal history of moors when growing up on the Isle of Lewis as well as peering into the murk to discover the cultural history and investigates the science and the crucial role they play in our climate. The challenge of keeping these fragile environments going and meeting the balance of economic needs of the local populations is a difficult one given just how much carbon they are capable of storing

The book does weave around, just like the path that you would take through a bog, but it doesn't lessen the impact of what Murray does here in telling us of his love for these places. There are fine illustrations from Douglas Robertson and a smattering of his own poems throughout the book which nicely adjusts the pace. Overall a fascinating book of a part of the landscape that is often overlooked.
… (plus d'informations)
 
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PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
This slightly odd book is a collection of odd anecdotes and poems about the customs (or alleged customs) of the inhabitants of the abandoned Hebridean island of St Kilda, particularly in the period leading up to the evacuation of the remaining population in 1930. It is told within the framework of a story where a man is sent back to the island shortly after the evacuation to guard the deserted houses, as they have been ransacked by fishermen, and he is told these anecdotes by the supposed spirits of the former inhabitants (though they would almost all still have been alive then, presumably). I didn't think this approach works, as it wasn't clear which were "real" stories of the St Kildans and which were invented/embellished/conflated for the purpose of the fictional framework. In a sense, I guess it doesn't matter, but all the same this didn't work for me, despite my long standing fascination for this island and its culture.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
john257hopper | Aug 5, 2015 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
17
Membres
103
Popularité
#185,855
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
3
ISBN
34

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