The Camerons: A Novel

· Macmillan + ORM
5.0
2 reviews
Ebook
510
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

On her 16th birthday, Maggie Drum sets out from the grimy streets of her Scottish coalmining town to find a man of pride, independence and spirit fit enough to be her husband. She finds her man in Gillon Cameron, a tall fisherman from the Highlands, who will learn to go down into the mines yet refuse to settle for the grinding poverty of the coal miner's life. In a world that treats coal miners as little more than slaves, Maggie's steely determination and Gillon's abiding pride stake their claim to a better future for themselves and seven children. Robert Crichton, author of The Secret of Santa Vittoria, brings his stellar storytelling gifts to this sweeping family epic, capturing the Camerons' moments of triumph and loss, bitterness and love set in the magnificent landscapes and social battles of 19th century Scotland. First published in 1972, and a New York Times bestseller for more than five months, The Camerons draws you in with what at first appears to be a straightforward family drama, then captivates you by the complexity and depth of the Camerons' struggle to create a future of hope and triumph.

Ratings and reviews

5.0
2 reviews

About the author

Robert Crichton (1925-1993) was a novelist and magazine writer. Born in New Mexico, Crichton spent most of his life in New York after serving in the Army during World War II in the Battle of the Bulge and graduating from Harvard in 1951. Crichton's first book, The Great Impostor (1960), told the true story of Fred Demara, an impostor who successfully assumed scores of guises including that of a Trappist monk, Texas prison warden and surgeon in the Royal Canadian Navy. The bestselling book was adapted into a 1961 movie starring Tony Curtis. A follow-up, The Rascal and the Road, was a memoir about Crichton's adventures with Demara.

Crichton's first novel was The Secret of Santa Vittoria (1966). Set in an Italian hilltown during World War II, The Secret of Santa Vittoria was the rollicking tale of the town's attempts to hide a million bottles of wine from German occupiers. It occupied the New York Times bestseller list for 50 weeks, became an international bestseller, and was adapted into a Golden Globe-winning film starring Anthony Quinn. Crichton's second novel, The Camerons, was published in 1972. This sweeping family saga, focusing on a 19th century Scottish family's struggle to rise above the grinding poverty of the coal miner's life, was based upon Robert Crichton's own Scottish forebears. The Camerons was on the New York Times bestseller list for over five months, and became a BBC miniseries.

At the time of his death in 1993, Robert Crichton was at work on a memoir of his time in the army which he had tentatively, and with characteristic self-deprecation, entitled Memoirs of a Bad Soldier.

Robert Crichton's father, Kyle Crichton, was a writer and editor at Collier's magazine and author of novels and biographies, including a biography of the Marx Brothers. Kyle Crichton also wrote a column for The New Masses, a Marxist weekly, under the name Robert Forsythe. Robert Crichton's wife, Judy Crichton, was an Emmy Award-winning documentary writer, director and producer, and author of America 1900: The Turning Point.

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