In the 1930s Nan Shepherd was one of Scotland's best-known writers.
Three novels, The Quarry Wood, The Weatherhouse and A Pass in the
Grampians - as well as a volume of poetry, In the Cairngorms - were all
published between 1928 and 1934 while she was in her 30s. These books
established her reputation as one of the most highly respected members
of the Scottish Modernist movement.
Then, much later, in 1977, came The Living Mountain, a short but
powerful reflection on her experiences walking in the Cairngorms - a
book which was immediately described as a masterpiece by some of the
original reviewers. Incredibly, the manuscript of The Living Mountain
had been in Nan's drawer since the 1940s when she first wrote it. It is
now a widely read classic. But just as the manuscript had lain
unpublished for all those years, it wasn't really until ten years ago
that the genius of this book was truly discovered when it was
re-published with an introductory essay by Robert Macfarlane. Nan died
in 1981 before any of this later success took place.
Nan Shepherd was an intensely private woman. But the author of this
first biography, Charlotte Peacock, has been as successful in finding
her way into the life of her subject as was Nan herself, in her words,
in "finding her way into the mountains". She has had unparalleled access
to all of Nan's archives and to her remaining friends and acquaintances.
This biography also provides its readers with both a superbly crafted
social portrait of North East Scotland in the early 20th century and a
first-rate account of the Scottish literary scene and its key figures,
such as Neil Gunn and Hugh MacDiarmid, during those years.
Into the Mountain unravels the mysteries of this enigmatic writer and in
doing so brings her vividly to life. The book is a beautifully written
and highly accessible biography of Nan that will surely lead an even
wider audience to her in the years to come.