A woman from New England falls for a charming Scottish landowner only
to discover she's also in a complex relationship with his family's
400-year-old ancestral estate, The Guynd. Funny and heartwarming, this
is the story of a house, a place, and a marriage.
Guynd (rhymes with "wind") is Gaelic for "a high, marshy place." It's
there that Belinda Rathbone's memoir takes place after her unlikely
marriage and move to pastoral Scotland. There she learns to cope with a
grand but crumbling mansion still recovering from the effects of two
world wars, an overgrown landscape, a derelict garden, troublesome
tenants, local aristocracy, Scottish rituals, and a husband who loathes
change.
Alternating between enchantment and near despair, Rathbone digs into
family and local history in an effort to understand her new surroundings
and the ties that bind us through generations. "The book lifts and
excels," wrote The New York Times, "Rathbone nails down a little bit
of the Scottish soul in all its stark splendor."
The perfect book for anyone who loves a fish-out-of-water romance and a
touching story of home.