Mick Harper wrote:I couldn't hold out any longer. I am finally reading Harry Potter. A Brief History of the Common Law by Harry Potter. Seems a bit dry. I can't see what all the fuss was about.
Aha, I can see where you've gone wrong.
You should be reading one of his other books. I recommend "
Bloodfeud: The Stewarts and Gordans at War: The Murrays and Gordons at War in the Age of Mary Queen of Scots" - there's a lot more sex, violence and crime in that one.
The book plots the bloody feud between two great Scottish earldoms during the sixteenth-century. This is a story of passions, and follies, of courage and crime. It is set before a backdrop of the tragic life of Mary Queen of Scots, deposed by her own half brother, the first earl of Moray, the Machiavellian nature of court politics, and the extraordinary success of James VI, who managed to hold sway over feuding and arrogant nobles, and ultimately protect his favourite, the sixth earl of Huntly from retribution for the killing of his rival.
Or his book on the Scottish Civil War -
Edinburgh Under Siege 1571-1573 -
In 1571 Edinburgh was at the center of a bloody three-year siege in which many men sacrificed their lives in support of the dethroned Queen Mary. William Kirkcaldy, as keeper of the ancient fort and regal palace, with his allies defiantly held the castle against a succession of regents. In despair Regent James Douglas, the Earl of Morton, turned to Scotland s oldest enemy, the English, to overthrow the Castle rebels. Within 10 days the English cannons and a thousand men brought the rebels to their knees and the majestic towers of the citadel crumbling around them. The siege was an embodiment of the hatred and rivalry between Mary Queen of Scots and Elizabeth I
Just imagine, if you had been a budding writer sitting in (say) the back window of a coffee house at what is now 21 George IV Bridge, Edinburgh EH1 1EN, you could have watched the whole thing in real time. Who knows, you might have been inspired to write a mega-best-selling book about it all. Stranger things have happened.