A Return to the Outer Hebrides & What I Read (Including 20 Books of Summer, 4–5)

Three summers ago, we first explored the Outer Hebrides, moving south from Lewis through Harris to North Uist and Benbecula. It took longer than expected to make it back to the Western Isles. (It’s also taken longer than expected to write up a trip we took in late June. My excuse is we’ve been having work done in the house for a couple of weeks and it’s thrown off routines, plus we’re now away again on a short break.) We kept our word and completed the southern half of the chain this year, staying on South Uist and journeying via Eriskay to Barra and Vatersay. As last time, we combined public transport and car rental. Unlike last time, we had no major transport disasters. We took the train up to Edinburgh, where we rented a car and headed first of all to the edge of the Cairngorms. The village had little to offer apart from riverside scenery, so while my husband did beetle-collecting fieldwork nearby, I spent my time reading in the idyllic B&B grounds. Here the wildlife came to me: seven stags and a red squirrel! I’ve substituted in two of my relevant trip reads to my 20 Books of Summer roster.

20 Books of Summer, #4

The Cone-Gatherers by Robin Jenkins (1955)

Rightly likened to Of Mice and Men, this is an engrossing short novel about two brothers, Neil and Calum, tasked with climbing trees and gathering the pinecones of a wealthy Scottish estate. They will be used to replant the many woodlands being cut down to fuel the war effort. Calum, the younger brother, is physically and intellectually disabled but has a deep well of compassion for living creatures. He has unwittingly made an enemy of the estate’s gamekeeper, Duror, by releasing wounded rabbits from his traps. Much of the story is taken up with Duror’s seemingly baseless feud against the brothers – though we’re meant to understand that his bedbound wife’s obesity and his subsequent sexual frustration may have something to do with it – as well as with Lady Runcie-Campbell’s class prejudice. Her son, Roderick, is an unexpected would-be hero and voice of pure empathy. I read this quickly, with grim fascination, knowing tragedy was coming but not quite how things would play out. The introduction to Canongate’s Canons Collection edition is by actor Paul Giamatti, of all people. (Secondhand – Community Furniture Project, Newbury)

 


Then it was a several-hour drive to Oban to take our rescheduled ferry over to Lochboisdale in South Uist for the holiday proper to begin. With a six-night Airbnb stay booked in the home of a local woman, we relaxed into an unhurried pace of life. It’s more about the landscape than any particular indoor attractions here; during rainy spells we toured the excellent museum, tasted gin and rum at the North Uist (Downpour) and Benbecula (MacMillan Spirits) distilleries, took advantage of 5 for £1 books and CDs at the Benbecula thrift shop, and tried a couple of cafes, but for the most part we just made a few short excursions per day.

We saw acres of machair (wildflower-rich fields), sand dunes undermined by an empire of rabbits, deserted beaches, and rare patches of woodland. We successfully staked out white-tailed sea eagles, red-throated divers, and a red-necked phalarope; watched cuckoos and short-eared owls (who are active in the daytime) as much as possible; and stared at every likely sea loch but failed to find an otter. Each evening we’d heat up a simple supper – pouches of curry and rice; ravioli with tomato sauce – using the microwave and hob. In quite a contrast to the heatwave-mired south of England, we had 12–16 degrees C (54–61 degrees F) most days, with light rain and high winds. The radiators and Rayburn (a big stove like an Aga) were on most of the time.

 

20 Books of Summer, #5

The Inn at the Edge of the World by Alice Thomas Ellis (1990)

Eric and Mabel moved from the Midlands to run a hotel on a remote Scottish island. He places an advertisement in select London periodicals to lure in some Christmas-haters for the holidays and attracts a motley group: a bereaved former soldier writing a biography of General Gordon, a pair of actors known only for commercials, a psychoanalyst, and a department store buyer looking for a novel sweater pattern. Mabel decides she’s had enough and flees the island just as the guests start arriving. One guest is stalking another; one has history on the island. And all along, there are hints that this is a site of major selkie activity. I found it jarring how the novella moved from Shena Mackay-like social comedy into magic realism and doubt I’ll read more by Ellis (I’d already read one volume of Home Life), though this was light and enjoyable enough. (Secondhand – Awesomebooks.com)

 

I was pleased that I managed to find two relevant hyperlocal reads. It was so neat to encounter the same place names out the car window and in my books:

 

To the Edge of the Sea: Schooldays of a Crofter’s Child by Christina Hall (1995)

Hall’s father inherited a South Uist croft and the family struggled so much financially that she was sent to live with her schoolteacher aunts on Benbecula and then Barra. Some things haven’t changed on the islands, such as the rabbits on the machair and the notoriously choppy ferry rides back to the mainland, where she attended a convent school at Fort William. There are some enjoyable pen portraits, such as of an Irish peddler. The most memorable incident was when she ran away from the aunts’ to attend a family wedding on Benbecula. The tone is pleasant, reminiscent of early Diana Athill and Doreen Tovey, but this isn’t one to pick up unless you have a particular interest in the places described. (Public library)

A Summer Like No Other by Martin MacIntyre (2018; 2025)

As World Cup fever ramps up in the summer of 1978, aimless 20-year-old Colin Quinn breaks from his university studies to shadow his uncle, Dr. Ruairidh Gillies, during his locum on South Uist. Between the home medical visits and recording folktales and songs by an eighty-something bard and several other members of the community, Colin gets to know almost everyone – but the person he knows the least well is himself. His involvement with the bard’s great-niece and her abusive husband will change the tenor of the summer for him, and have lasting consequences that only become clear decades later.

The many Gaelic phrases, defined in footnotes, help to create the atmosphere. The chapter epigraphs from the legend of Oisín (son of Fionn Mac Cumhaill) and Tír Na nÓg, the land of eternal youth, heighten the contrast between Colin’s idealism and the reality of this life-changing season. I think this is the first book I’ve read that was originally published in Gaelic and I hope it will find readers far beyond its island niche. (BookSirens)

 

There’s Something about Mary

My husband would like it known that he was the clever clogs who spotted a theme to our trip: Mary.

1) Our transit through Edinburgh was brief and muggy, but we made sure to leave just enough time to queue for cones at Mary’s Milk Bar, which has the most interesting flavours you’ll find anywhere. Pictured, though half eaten, are my one scoop of Earl Grey and peach sorbet and one scoop of fig and cardamom ice cream. When we returned to Edinburgh to return the car at the end of our trip, I took the train home by myself but C stayed on for a conference, during which he treated himself to another round at Mary’s.

 

A piper statue at the Airbnb that continually frightened us on the stairs.

2) Our South Uist host was Mary MacInnes, a major mover and shaker in the local Gaelic-speaking community. (Her Alexa even obeyed Gaelic commands.) She is a retired head teacher of one of the schools and had various grandchildren popping in and out. Thanks to her heads-up, we had a unique cultural experience: a local arts venue’s lunchtime ceilidh of live music that was being filmed for BBC Scotland. Between her and others, we heard a lot of spoken Gaelic and got further into the mood by finding Julie Fowlis’s Gaelic-language albums online and playing them in our rental car. Each morning, Mary served us breakfast. We made the mistake of answering “Yes” to the question “D’ye take porridge?” on the first morning and had to slog through a stodgy bowl for five of the next six days. However, she also produced fresh-baked scones on two days and that made up for it. Triangular and baked in a cast-iron skillet, they tasted more like soda bread and were a perfect snack with jam.

 

3) The final full day of our trip was spent on Barra, a quick hop from South Uist. Whereas Lewis and Harris are staunchly Protestant, the southern islands are Catholic. We’d found a roadside shrine on South Uist, and on this late June day we devoted a couple of hours to climbing up Heaval, Barra’s highest hill as far as the statue of Mary, Star of the Sea. We were taken with this round, rugged island of secluded coves and beach-lounging cows; I can imagine going back to spend more time there. (I’d also like to see a bit more of Eriskay, from which our ferry departed and where the shipwreck that inspired Whisky Galore – one to read next time – took place.) Our hostel room overlooked the harbour where our ferry for the mainland was docked, which was handy as we had to be in the queue by 6:10 the next morning.

My additional reasonably local or otherwise relevant reading:

Four Ducks on a Pond: A Highland Memory by Nicholas the Cat with Annabel Carothers (2010)

A quaint short memoir set in the 1950s on the island of Mull (which we sailed past on our way to and from the Outer Hebrides). It’s narrated in tongue-in-cheek fashion by Nicholas the Cat, who pals around with the farm’s dogs, horse and goats and comments on the doings of its human inhabitants, such as “Puddy” (Carothers), a war widow, and her daughter Fionna, who goes away to school. “We understand so much about them, yet they understand so little about us,” he opines. Indeed, the animals are all observant and can communicate with each other. Corrieshellach is a fine horse taken to compete in shows. The goats are lucky to escape with their lives after a local outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease among livestock. Nicholas grows fat on rabbits and fathers several litters. He voices some traditional views (the Clearances: bad but the Empire: good; crows: bad); then again, cats would certainly be C/conservatives. A sweet Blyton-esque read for precocious children or sentimental adults, this passed the time nicely on a long drive. It could do with a better title, though; the ducks only play a tiny role. (Favourite aside: “that beverage which humans find so comforting when things aren’t right. Tea.”) (Secondhand – Benbecula thrift shop)

 

Katie Morag’s Island Stories by Mairi Hedderwick (1995)

I read half of this large-format paperback before our trip and the rest afterward. It collects four of Hedderwick’s picture books, which are all set on the Isle of Struay, a kind of Hebridean composite that reproduces the islands’ wildlife and scenery beautifully. Katie Morag’s parents run the shop and post office and her mother always seems to be producing another little brother. In Katie Morag Delivers the Mail, the little red-haired girl causes chaos by delivering parcels at random. Sophisticated Granma Mainland and practical Grannie Island are the stars of Katie Morag and the Two Grandmothers. Katie Morag learns to deal with her anger and with being punished, respectively, in …and the Tiresome Ted and …and the Big Boy Cousins. Cute stories with useful lessons, but the illustrations are the main attraction. I’ll get the rest of the books out from the library. (Little Free Library)

 

Island Calling by Francesca Segal (2025)

The sequel to Welcome to Glorious Tuga, which I reviewed for Shelf Awareness last year. Charlotte Walker is a tortoise researcher who becomes the default veterinarian on this remote South Atlantic island that combines a 1950s English ethos with a cosmopolitan heritage from sailors and settlers. In this volume, Charlotte resolves her troubled love triangle and cements her understanding of her father’s identity. But the main thing that happens is that her posh and entitled mother, Lucinda Compton-Neville, takes a break from her busy job as a QC to travel to the island and demand that Charlotte return to London with her. Motherhood is a strong theme throughout: Natalie Lindo, already a mother of four, has to decide what to do about a high-risk pregnancy; half-feral Annie Goss rejects her mother’s affection, and so on. Some of the characters are lovably quirky, but overall I find the cliché-laden series lackluster, a pointless and indulgent side-track and thus a real waste of talent by Segal (after The Innocents and Mother Ship, especially). If you enjoy romance novels or escapist beach reads, you might feel differently. But I won’t bother reading the third volume.

With thanks to Chatto & Windus (Penguin) for the proof copy for review.

 

I also made good progress on Storm Pegs by Jen Hadfield, a memoir of life in Shetland – different islands with their own character, but still fitting the hardy Scottish spirit.

I’d finished my first 7 Books of Summer by the end of June, so I was on track as of then. (Reviews of two more coming up on Friday.) I’m in the middle of some designated reads, but it’ll be ages before I finish any. I’ll hope to review another batch by the end of July.

28 responses

  1. margaret21's avatar

    I’m surprised you bothered with volume 2 of the Tuga trilogy. I shan’t. It was OK as a beach read (not that I do beach reads) : ‘cliché-laden and lacklustre’ says it all. Stick with Katie Morag! I haven’t read any Alice Thomas Ellis since my student days. I quite enjoyed her work then, but on the strength of your review, I’ll leave her in the past.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I was offered the Segal for review via Vintage and thought, why not. But it certainly didn’t improve on the first volume.

      Maybe I haven’t found the just-right Alice Thomas Ellis for me.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

    sand dunes undermined by an empire of rabbits“–I had no idea rabbits could ruin dunes! I’d love to read Four Ducks on a Pond and Katie Morag. Also the Christina Hall book.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Do you also know and love Scotland, then? It’s one of my favorite places 🙂

      Alas, rabbits are a huge environmental problem on South Uist and are being culled. Already, 2000 have been shot towards a target of 5000. Hunters go out at night and attract them with a lamp. Although it makes me sad to think about, I can see why it’s necessary to protect the delicate sand dune ecosystem.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

        Sad. I love Scotland. I’ve visited once.

        Like

  3. A Life in Books's avatar

    Lovely holiday! Your first B&B sounds particularly restful. I was amused by the honesty box cake caravan which reminded me of rewatching Shetland recently which had an episode featuring a cake fridge.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      They also sold bread, fudge, and ice creams in the caravan. Unfortunately, we only managed to shop there once.

      Shetland is on our list of places to return to!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Elle's avatar

    What a gorgeous holiday! And well done for finding some themed reading too. The Cone-Gatherers sounds quite nice; out of all the ones you’ve listed I think it appeals most to me.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I only discovered the Hall by doing a keyword search for ‘Uist’ in the library catalogue!

      The Cone-Gatherers is an obscure classic worth reading.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Annabel (AnnaBookBel)'s avatar

    Sounds a lovely holiday. The cone-gatherers appeals most to me too. I remember my daughter loving the Katie Morag books when little.

    The cake honesty caravan was done by Banjo Neale (Aussie winner of Interior Design masters a couple of yrs ago. He now lives on Mull and had a BBC2 series about projects around there – https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m0022zc2/designing-the-hebrides-series-2-episode-3

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      How cool! Thanks for telling me about it.

      Like

  6. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    I loved this combo of your travel experiences with your summer reading (and such gorgeous photos, from ice-cream to trailers to a wheel in a wall…which should be a children’s book, really). The porridge made me laugh, and I liked imagining the texture of those scones. I read everything I could get of Alice Thomas Ellis from a small city library years ago, but it was the trilogy that I loved best by far (and I had to wait for a college booksale to finish reading it years later). Darkly funny but a little sad too (before I’d discovered Cold Comfort Farm or had read very much Muriel Spark at all). I wonder if the ones you’ve found might not be her best (hopefully someone else will have more context)? I was just reminded of her when I looked back to see when I’d first read Sarton and it was the same year I “discovered” ATE. (My post is ready for tomorrow. But you’re on another holiday, so it will keep. Have fun!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Simon reviewed this ATE and I thought it was worth a shot on an island holiday. I could be persuaded to try her again; at least most of her books are novella length.

      I have my Sarton post ready to schedule for tomorrow. I have my laptop with me and will link to yours!

      Like

  7. kaggsysbookishramblings's avatar

    What a wonderful trip – thanks so much for sharing!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks for indulging me by reading 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Laura's avatar

    Ah, I loved Barra. I saw an absolutely terrible remake of Whisky Galore there in a cinema they’d set up in a van on the beach. Good work on escaping the awful heatwave as well. I thought Norway would be a good shout but – at least in the south – it was hot there too!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I liked how Christina Hall described Barra as the perfect island: small and round, just like you’d imagine one on a treasure map, with a road around the outside and hidden wilderness in the middle.

      Ha ha, it doesn’t seem like a film that was crying out for a remake! I’d like to read the novel / see the original, though.

      We heard that South Uist reached 26 degrees in the weeks after we left. That must be a very rare heatwave indeed in those parts.

      I do envy your Scandinavian journeys of the last couple of years!

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    Thanks for sharing – I really enjoyed your pictures! That red squirrel! Cows on the beach! I vicariously traveled through your post. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks! Glad you enjoyed. I always feel like it’s self-indulgent to write long posts about my vacations, but it also serves as a way for me to remember them so I can look back in years to come.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. […] Water” has the atmosphere of a Scottish folk ballad, which made it perfect reading for our recent holiday to Scotland. “Leonardo, Michelangelo, SuperStork” and “Mason’s Mini-break” stand out for their […]

    Like

  11. Jane's avatar

    this is such a lovely post, travel and reading what could be better?! I haven’t been to the Scottish Islands, not any of them and keep starting to make plans that then don’t happen, but I feel encouraged for next year, thank you! The Cone Gatherers is on my list too.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Scottish islands are among our favourite destinations. I hope you’ll get to explore some soon!

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Liz Dexter's avatar

    A lovely trip and some excellent matched books. I’ll be interested to find out what you think of Storm Pegs as I have that on my wishlist.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’m halfway through and it’s fantastic. Not one to read quickly as the short chapters are piecemeal rather than creating one narrative, but I’m really enjoying it. As you’d expect from a poet, the writing is the star.

      Liked by 1 person

  13. Naomi's avatar

    I loved reading about your trip – especially since I’ve been around there now! If we go back some time, I would love to see more of the islands. We did go through Oban and stopped at the chocolate shop!

    I love that you had so many local books to read. There were a lot of books I wanted to buy while we were there, but we didn’t have the space. I did manage to buy a few at the used book store in Inverness – have you been to that one? I picked up a Scottish short story anthology and a novel by Naomi Mutchison. At another bookshop somewhere I found a Muriel Spark novel.

    Your pictures are beautiful and fun!

    P.S. We saw that line-up into Mary’s Milk Bar and wondered what was so great about it. We didn’t have time to find out, but now I know for next time. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ve been meaning to tell you how much I enjoyed seeing your daughter’s photos on Facebook! I know you were going to go to Islay. Did you do any other islands? Muriel Spark is a great choice and most of her books are nice and short. We’ve been to Inverness a couple of times and went to Leakey’s the first. I think I remember their books feeling pricey, so I didn’t buy anything, but they used to have a really nice cafe.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Naomi's avatar

        Leakey’s was the name of it! I don’t remember it having a cafe, though…
        We didn’t go to Islay in the end – the ferry didn’t run the day we were hoping to go. We’ll just have to go back! The only other island we were on was Skye. We tried to fit in as much as we could in the time we had. Castles were a priority – especially the MacKinnon and Fraser castles.
        I’m so glad you were able to see our photos – I knew I wouldn’t get around to blogging about it. We had so much fun. And I was very proud of myself for mastering the left-hand driving!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        No, they’d closed the cafe by the time of our second visit, alas. It used to be upstairs at the back.

        Oh, too bad you missed out on Islay! The ferries can be hit or miss in Scotland. It’s a real problem for people who live on the islands. Skye is lovely, though. I’m glad you got to see it.

        Well done on the driving! (Something I still haven’t done!)

        Like

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