Scottish Field

‘This book proves to be far more than yet another wartime love story, captivatin­g the reader instantly’

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On attempting to transfer DP to a hospital boat, Louise, her patient and another nurse are blown off course and forced to make their escape through Turkey to Greece. The novel focuses on the lovers’ conversati­ons, which last well into the wee, small hours, moving back and forth between tales of their time at war and describing their lives back home. For DP, this is the story of his life in the West Highlands of Scotland: he tells Louise of the coast and the glens and his relationsh­ip with his family, giving her and the reader a vivid insight into the grand sweep and the details of everyday life in the Highlands a century ago. A life full of bagpiping, ceilidh dancing, sheep shearing and the importance of loyalty to the community. Louise, in return, captivates DP and the reader with her descriptio­n of a harsh upbringing in a Welsh coal mining community.

MacDonald takes us on the touching journey of these two young people as each in turn paints a picture of the conditions that they lived through during their time behind lines as medical staff, and as an ordinary soldier during a conflict that took so many lives it often resembled wholesale slaughter.

It is a fast-paced narrative and the characteri­sation is sufficient­ly adroit that both DP and Louise make for deeply likeable characters. This book proves to be far more than yet another wartime love story, captivatin­g the reader instantly with its incorporat­ion of different locations, including old Highland communitie­s, while also providing glimpses into other, contrastin­g ways of life of the time – the great shipping centres of Glasgow and Liverpool and the mining valleys of Wales. MacDonald mines the themes of the feeling of community kinship, teamwork and courage as the narrative is developed.

MacDonald grew up in the Scottish Highlands and later served in his local regiment, the Queen’s Own Highlander­s, which probably explains why his characteri­sation of DP feels so authentic. If MacDonald’s aim was to make DP a thoroughly engaging and moving character, then he succeeds in spades.

I flew through this novel in a day. MacDonald’s use of constantly unfolding drama and of tales of survival during the horrors of the First World War, balanced with the rewarding experience of getting to know the protagonis­ts’ past, keeps the pages turning and makes it almost impossible to put down.

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