Holyrood

Life Stories

The Conservati­ve Member of the Scottish Parliament for the Highlands and Islands shares his reading habits

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Donald Cameron on why he loves The Chronicles of Narnia

What was your favourite book as a child? My favourites were the Chronicles of Narnia. Not only were they my favourites, but I take great pleasure in reading them to my children as well. I loved the The Horse and His Boy and The Last Battle – those are probably my two favourites. They’re obviously written from a mid-20th century perspectiv­e where the morals and ethics of the day have moved on, but I still think they are wonderful stories that completely capture the imaginatio­n. Reading them to my children is an exercise in nostalgia for me. Which fictional character did you most identify with as a child? I don’t think there is one. I just love reading, but I don’t think I ever saw myself as a character or identified with one. I loved history, anything that took you back to the world of knights in armour. I got into Nigel Tranter’s books in my teens and I loved historical fiction. I also moved onto Dickens and Robert Louis Stevenson as I got a bit older. Is there a book which got you into politics? My interest in politics didn’t stem from reading, but an interest in current affairs. History was my great love, so as I went through school and read history at university, I read a lot of nineteenth century political history and the political biographie­s of figures like Disraeli and Gladstone. My other great interest is American politics. I worked in Washington for a year after leaving university, so I really got into American history. I really enjoyed Primary Colors, it was the late 90s, the end of the Clinton era. Which book couldn’t you finish? There are many, but I only read one page of Crime and Punishment. I just remember putting it down and never picking it up again. With older novels you’ve really got to be committed to them in a way you don’t have to be with the latest spy thriller. Is there a book you’ve read recently that you particular­ly enjoyed? I have young children and a very busy life so, sadly, reading has had to take a bit of a back seat. Books that I read now have to be quite easy. Over Christmas, I read Ben Macintyre’s The Spy and the Traitor about Oleg Gordievsky. It was fascinatin­g – a history book that read like a thriller. Which book would you be embarrasse­d about others seeing on your bookshelf during a Zoom call? There are plenty. I’m not one of those people that collects a library to have behind me. I’ve got a few Dan Brown novels, but I’m not ashamed of them. I loved The Da Vinci Code. I’m not at all ashamed of ‘crappy airport novels’, as my father calls them.

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