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Weir of Hermiston (Collected Works of Robert Louis Stevenson)

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Title: Weir of Hermiston (Collected Works of Robert Louis Stevenson)
by Robert Louis Stevenson, Catherine Kerrigan
ISBN: 0-7486-0473-1
Publisher: Edinburgh Univ ersity Press
Pub. Date: April, 1996
Format: Hardcover
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $51.00
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Average Customer Rating: 4 (2 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 3
Summary: Weir of Hermi...
Comment: I was surprisingly disappointed with this novel, partly because so much is left in the air. The relationship between Archie and his father (a finely disguised mix of RLS' father and Lord Braxfield- whose portrait actually appears on the cover), is perhaps one of the most interesting features. Christina or Kirstie (the younger one) appears part way through and although she is obviously going to be a major character in the novel disappears (because the MS cuts off) at just the least appropriate time. I suggest with the notes that you read a chapter and then read the notes for the next one, otherwise it can be a wee bittie piecemeal reading the thing. Don't be put off by the Lowland Scots dialogue if you aren't Scottish, Miller has listed the more important words at the back and most appear several times. What is there is well written (although pretty wordy by today's standards), but it's not good to be left in the lurch like that.

Rating: 5
Summary: Unfinished, but excellent
Comment: This was Stevenson's last novel and is unfinished, though it is known how it was going to finish. The main feature of the plot is the relationship between Lord Hermiston, a judge renowned for his stringency, and his more liberal (but still fairly well-behaved) son. The plot is of course a lot more complex than that, and the father is absent for most of even what Stevenson wrote before his death.

It is a very Scottish novel, with large portions of it taking place in the Scottish countryside, with clan relations, etc. and with most of the dialogue in Scots.

Some of the characterisation is excellent, and if it had been finished with Stevenson's usual ability along the suggested storyline, it would have been a very moving novel indeed.

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