Notes: |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [299]-325) and index
"Rapt in Plaid combines reflection, criticism, and memoir to illustrate a curious and long-lasting connection between Scottish and Canadian literary traditions. Examples drawn from genres including lyric poetry, narrative romance, war fiction, children's literature, sentimental fiction, thrillers, domestic novels, and short stories link Canadian writers such as John Richardson, Isabella Valancy Crawford, Sinclair Ross, Hugh MacLennan, Margaret Laurence, and W.O. Mitchell to Scottish writers such as Robert Burns, Walter Scott, Thomas Carlyle, J.M. Barrie, Robert Louis Stevenson, John Buchan, and George Mackay Brown."--Jacket
Auld Lang Syne -- - Burns, Acorn, and the Rivers of Song -- - Scott, Crawford, and the Highlands of Romance -- - Scott, Findley, and the Borders of War -- - A Cup o'Kindness -- - Signs of the Times -- - Galt, Ross, and the Lowlands of Irony -- - Carlyle, Mitchell, Laurence, and the Storms of Rhetoric -- - Everlasting Yea? -- - Road to the Isles -- - Stevenson, Lee, and the Garden of Childhood -- - Barrie, Montgomery, and the Mists of Sentiment -- - Buchan, MacLennan, and the Winds of Violence -- - Braggart's in My Step -- - Open the Door! -- - Sinclair, Saunders, and the Outskirts of Story -- - Duncan, Munro, and the Vistas of Memory -- - Brought to Mind
|