{"product_id":"the-cone-gatherers-canons","title":"The Cone-gatherers (Canons)","description":"Review\n\n\"Let me alert everyone to the best-kept secret in modern British literature. If you love the novel; if you are interested in books that are humane and wise, not slick and cynical; then treat yourself this year to some Robin Jenkins\" -- Andrew Marr\n\n\"Like all great masters, his skill is lightly worn, his sentences singing with what he does not say\" ― The Times\n\n\"A masterpiece of concision and terrible pathos\" -- Isobel Murray\n\n\"Few novels in our heritage have the bell-like harmonies of this book . . . it has a strange haunting poetic quality, conjuring from a few props a fable of eternal significance\" -- Iain Crichton Smith\n\n\"It would not be too demonstrative to claim that The Cone-Gatherers is Scotland's Cherry Orchard . . . It feels as eerily prescient today as it did when it was first published in the 1950s and is the kind of book that offers up new, modern meanings with every reading\" -- STUART COSGROVE ― The List\n\nProduct Description\n\nIn the shadow of a war that rages through Europe, brothers Calum and Neil work to gather pine cones in the grounds of a Scottish estate. When Calum releases two mutilated rabbits from a snare, he comes face to face with Duror, the gamekeeper. In retaliation, in the depths of the wood, Duror lays a trap for the cone-gatherers.\n\nNeil prophesises that forces of evil will encroach upon the harmony of their lives. It is a prophesy that comes true when Duror commits an act so brutal it destroys all sense of humanity in the once thriving wood. Powerful and unforgettable, Robin Jenkins' masterpiece is a haunting story of love and violence, and an investigation of class-conflict, war and envy.\n\nBook Description\n\nTHE STRUGGLE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL NEVER RESTED: IN THE WORLD, AND IN EVERY HUMAN BEING, IT WENT ON\n\nFrom the Back Cover\n\nyes\n\nAbout the Author\n\nAuthor of a number of landmark novels including The Cone Gatherers, The Changeling, Happy for the Child, The Thistle and the Grail and Guests of War, Jenkins is rapidly attaining recognition as one of Scotland's greatest writers. The themes of good and evil, of innocence lost, of fraudulence, cruelty and redemption shine through his work. His novels, shot through with ambiguity, are rarely about what they seem. He published his first book, So Gaily Sings the Lark, at the age of thirty-eight, and by the time of his death in 2005, over thirty of his novels were in print.","brand":"Canongate Canons","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":40594359091285,"sku":"9780857862358N","price":5.99,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/2481\/5790\/files\/10493fef-f54d-4b1a-9680-aed4b63655b0.jpg?v=1682358856","url":"https:\/\/smeikalbooks.co.uk\/products\/the-cone-gatherers-canons","provider":"smeikalbooks","version":"1.0","type":"link"}