Ratings2
Average rating4.5
Divided between her love of the land and the brutal harshness of farming life, young Chris Guthrie finally chooses to stay in the rural community of her childhood. Yet the First World War and the economic and social changes that follow make her a widow and mock the efforts of her youth. But although the days of the small crofter are over, Chris symbolises and intuitive strength which, like the land itself, endures despite everything. Sunset Song is the first and most celebrated book of Grassic Gibbon's great trilogy, A Scot's Quair. It provides a powerful description of the first two decades of the century through the evocation of change and the lyrical intensity of its prose. It is hard to think of any other Scottish novel this century which has received wider acclaim and better epitomises the feeling of a nation.
Reviews with the most likes.
30 years ago I pretended to read this for English at school but just hated it. We were so busy with the symbolism and the meaning behind the tale I couldn't get into it.
Reading it now, I was moved and engaged. Kinraddie was believable and the language painted pictures in my mind. Chris was a beautifully complex creature, as she grows up and the outside world starts to affect her little piece of Scottish soil and her life.
Thankfully I still have a Scots dictionary to help with some of the words I didn't know so that didn't get in the way of my enjoyment. I'll likely search out the others in the Scots Quair to continue reading Chris' story.
Series
3 primary booksA Scots Quair is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 1932 with contributions by Lewis Grassic Gibbon.