George Mackay Brown was born in Stromness, Orkney, on 17 October 1921.
He died there in 1996.
His many awards include a Society of Authors Travel Award, 1968; SAC
Literature Prize, 1969; Katherine Mansfield Menton Short Story Prize,
1971; Hon. LLD from Dundee University, 1977; OBE, 1974; James Tait Black
Memorial Prize 1987 (for The Golden Bird). He was nominated for the
Booker Prize in 1994 for his novel Beside the Ocean of Time.
He grew up in fairly straitened circumstances as his father was unable
to work through illness. Mackay Brown himself suffered from tuberculosis
as a young man. In his twenties he worked as a journalist on the Orkney
Herald, but at the age of 30 he left Orkney to study at Newbattle Abbey
College, near Edinburgh, where he met Edwin Muir, who was Warden at the
time, a meeting that had a profound influence on him.
He left behind him an extraordinary body of work: novels, short stories,
poetry, journalism and even two operatic collaborations with Peter
Maxwell Davis.
Christmas Stories gathers together some of the Winter and Christmas
stories and that he either published separately in newspapers, included
in limited edition book printings, or published in Winter Tales.
His first book of poems "The Storm" is also published by Galileo, with
an introduction by Kathleen Jamie.