Loch Lohman |
Author Rosemary Gemmell lives in a village on the west coast of
Scotland, twenty minutes from Loch Lomond and thirty minutes from the centre of
Glasgow. She joins us today to talk about
how her Scottish surroundings inspire her writing. Learn more about Rosemary
and her books at her website and blog.
Highland Mary's Grave |
Scotland
as Setting
The setting in any novel is often one of the most important
aspects of the story for the author and the reader. This has never been truer
than it is for The Highland Lass, my
new Scottish novel, as it is mainly set around my own area in the west coast of
Scotland and across the River Clyde to Argyllshire. An unlikely early
inspiration was the large Greenock cemetery where ancient and elaborate graves
stones, winding paths, and overhanging trees provided much scope for
imagination. This was where my mother first introduced me to the gravestone of
Highland Mary, who was a brief but important love interest of Robert Burns, our
national poet. This early memory and a fascination for Mary Campbell was the
inspiration for the short historical chapters of The Highland Lass.
Inverclyde has an envious position right beside the River
Clyde, and across from Gourock sits the small seaside town of Dunoon in Argyll.
From my side of the river, we can see the entrance to the Holy Loch, bordered
by the towering Argyll hills, where the American Navy was based from the 1960s
until the early 80s. This provided another thread in the story, as Eilidh is
seeking the identity of her father, who may
have been an American officer. Dunoon is also where Highland Mary was born and
her statue forever looks across the Clyde.
Another inspiration is our famous Loch Lomond, one of the
largest freshwater lochs (or lakes) in Britain. It is now part of the Loch
Lomond and Trossachs National Park and its huge surface area crosses the
Highland Boundary Fault, which separates the highlands from the lowlands. One
of my favourite places is the fairy-tale village of Luss where the modern hero,
Lewis, takes Eilidh one day. The tiny cottages with their abundance of flowers
in summer months line both sides of the narrow main street, which wanders right
down to the edges of the loch. You may have heard the chorus of the famous
song, The Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond, the lyrics of which were evidently
written in the 18th century when one highlander was set free in the
north of England after supporting the defeated Bonnie Prince Charlie and one
was condemned to die.
Luss Cottages |
“Ye'll
tak' the high road and I'll tak the low road
And
I'll be in Scotland afore ye,
For
me and my true love will never meet again
On
the bonnie, bonnie banks of Loch Lomond.”
The other main setting for The Highland Lass, in the present and past, is Ayrshire, known as
Burns country. Mary and Robert Burns met and plighted their troth there in the
18th century and the small villages have hardly changed at all. The inn where
Burns and his cronies met, Poosie Nancie’s, is still in the same street in
Mauchline. Ayrshire is also where the blossoming relationship between modern
heroine, Eilidh Campbell, and handsome Scot, Lewis Grant, takes another step
forward.
But it is around Inverclyde where all the story threads come
together and where Eilidh finds the answers to the past. One of the best-known
views where Greenock meanders into Gourock is from the Lyle Hill overlooking
Cardwell Bay and the Argyll hills beyond. Along by this stretch of the Bay was
the perfect setting for Eilidh’s return to Scotland. Many of the large cruise
ships now visit the port at Greenock but you can still watch out for the oldest
sea-going passenger-carrying paddle steamer in the world, The Waverley, which sails down the Clyde during the summer months and
maintains our links to the steamers of the past.
The
Highland Lass
Eilidh
Campbell returns to her Scottish roots from America with one burning ambition:
to discover the identity of her real father. But her mother's past in
Inverclyde is a mystery with family secrets, a book of Robert Burns' poems with
a hidden letter and a photograph link to the Holy Loch at Dunoon when the
American Navy were in residence. Staying with her childhood friend, Kirsty,
while searching for answers, Eilidh begins to fall in love with handsome Scot
Lewis Grant, but just how divorced is he? Together they trace the story of
Highland Mary and Robert Burns, with its echoes to her mother's story. From
Dunoon, to Ayrshire and culminating in Greenock, Eilidh finds the past is
closer than she realises.
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3 comments:
Thanks so much for featuring me here, Lois - really appreciate it!
I so enjoyed reading about Scotland. Of all the places in the world I would like to visit, Scotland is at the top of my list. You've teased me with the Highland Mary/Robert Burns love story and how you've woven it into the storyline of your book. I'm intrigued. *grin*
Thanks so much for your lovely comment, Kaye - I do hope you manage to get here one day. Glad you're intrigued!
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