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Breakers
N. Brysson Morrison. With an Introduction by Mary Seenan
9781904999751
Paperback  180 pages
 
Published 15 January 2009    UK Price £13.95    US Price $18.95   

Originally published in 1930, Breakers, the first novel by Nancy Brysson Morrison, explores the damage that rejection and frustrated potential can inflict.
Following a casual affair with a local farmer's son, Euphemia Gillespie, daughter of the disillusioned and ineffectual minister of Barnfingal, is sent into the obscurity of the coastal village of Stonemerns where she gives birth to a son.
Left in the care of a former family servant, Callum Lamont grows up a troubled soul ignorant of his true parentage.
Finding some measure of happiness in his work as a farm labourer on the farm of Inchbuigh, where he also encounters first love, his life promises some future contentment.
Callum's plans are shattered, however, when Inchbuigh becomes a victim of the Highland Clearances - the account of which offers a unique literary portrayal of the period - and on being driven back to Stonemerns he discovers his mother's name and social status.
Determined to claim his birthright, he travels to Barnfingal, where he sets in motion a sequence of events that bring disaster not only to his mother's family, but also to himself.
Breakers is then a chilling account of the ramifications of abandonment - both by the individual and by the cruel legislators of Scotland in the early nineteenth century.

Nancy Brysson Morrison (1907-1986) was born in Glasgow.
Now remembered principally for her early novel - The Gowk Storm - her literary career was in fact long and diverse, encompassing novels and short stories, biographies and poetry, as well as print and broadcast journalism.

 

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