When young Francis Osbaldistone discovers that his vicious and scheming cousin Rashleigh has designs both on his father's business and his beloved Diana Vernon, he turns in desperation to Rob Roy for help. Chieftain of the MacGregor clan, Rob Roy is a brave and fearless man, able and cunning. But he is also an outlaw with a price on his head, and as he and Francis join forces to pursue Rashleigh, he is constantly aware that he, too, is being pursued – and could be captured at any moment. Set on the eve of the 1715 Jacobite uprising, Rob Roy brilliantly evokes a Scotland on the verge of rebellion, blending historical fact and a novelist's imagination to create an incomparable portrait of intrigue, rivalry and romance.
About the Author
Walter Scott was born in Edinburgh in 1771, educated there and called to the bar in 1792. Having developed an early interest in BOrder tales and ballads he spent much of his free time exploring the Border country, and in 1796 published his first work - a translation of Burger's 'Lenore' - anonymously. He began to publish wroks under his own name in 1802 while holiday well-respected offices such as Sheriff of Selkirkshire. Having refused the laureateship in 1813, and being eclipsed by Byron as a poet, Scott began to write novels - again anonymously to start with. He died in 1832.
Industry Reviews
Scott's wonderful romantic adventure is set on the eve of the Jacobite rising of 1715 and draws on social and cultural contrasts to examine the nature of political change and the part that individuals play in the events of history. Francis Osbaldistone is in thrall to his beautiful cousin, Diana Vernon, and pitted against another relative, the villainous Rashleigh Osbaldiston, in a swashbuckling tale which has rarely been matched for suspense and narrative daring. It also includes one of the enduring literary portrayals of heroism, in the shape of the dour, enigmatic outlaws, Rob Roy MacGregor, and proves that you don't have to see a movie to be excited, amused, scared and entertained! (Kirkus UK)