regshoe: Black and white picture of a man reading a large book (Reading 2)
Walking with Murder: On the Kidnapped Trail by Ian Nimmo (2005). Ian Nimmo is a serious Kidnapped fan who has traced out the entire route of David's wanderings across Scotland, walked it himself twice—once in 1960 and once forty years later—and done a lot of research besides into the history and geography of the novel; this book is the result. There's a lot of fascinating material in here, including much that brought parts of Kidnapped to life in new ways for me and some original investigations into the Appin murder, and it's highly recommended for all fans. I did think the book could have done with making clearer and more decisive choices about its subject matter: as it is it's a book about the geography of Kidnapped which turns in the middle into a book about the history of the Appin murder before turning back again, while making occasional digressions into general Scottish geography and changes to the country over time, and while all the material was interesting it could perhaps have been better organised. Also there are parts where Nimmo should have chosen between quoting verbatim from Kidnapped or broadly paraphrasing, because doing something that's not quite one or the other really doesn't work. Also I dislike his decision—having explained that RLS's one-L spelling of Alan Breck Stewart's name distinguishes the fictional character from the historical Allan—to continue using the two-L spelling throughout, even when clearly referring only to the fictional character. But I nitpick like this because the book was so interesting! I do recommend it. I was especially impressed by Nimmo's identification, independently corroborated by two other people, of a plausible specific spot on the hillside in Leitir Mhòr wood from where the murderer of Colin Campbell might have fired the shot.

Jane's Island by Marjorie Hill Allee (1931). This was one of [personal profile] osprey_archer's recommended Newbery Prize winners, which means it's a very good classic American children's book. I enjoyed it a lot! Zoological research and the power of cooperation and friendship across cultural and national boundaries are an excellent set of subjects for a children's book, and I loved all the scientific and natural-historical detail as well as the characters. Some observations:
1) The main character—Jane, the twelve-year-old daughter of a zoologist and keen naturalist herself—is the typical 'same age as or a little older than the target audience', but the story is told mostly from the point of view of a slightly older character, seventeen-year-old Elsie, who's looking after Jane for the summer (not quite a nanny or a governess; I would have described her role as 'au pair, but not foreign'; was that a thing?), and I thought that was an interesting choice.
2) A fairly important plot point involves rival researchers' teams of field workers gathering wild planarians (flatworms) from the seashore for their experiments; the characters worry that one team will gather too many and there won't be enough for the other, but no one ever appears to consider the planarian population itself a potential issue. The nature conservation movement definitely existed by 1931, but apparently it and scientific zoology hadn't met yet!
3) Yes, this book is both generally pro-tomboy and not quite entirely comfortable with gender non-conformity in girls and women in an also interesting way. It's admirable to encourage scientific careers like this, but all the same there are a couple of bits I'm glad I didn't read when I was Jane's age.
4) Why do all the American books I read from around this period go on about people from Boston spending their summers in the countryside/on the coast? Why is that such an important thing to keep coming up??

The Sirens Sang of Murder by Sarah Caudwell (1989). After reading this book (the third of four) I like the series enough to have nominated it for Yuletide—and specifically Julia and Selena, because a) if Julia is going to keep getting mistaken for a lesbian the least she deserves is actually to get to be a lesbian and b) I'm sure Selena would treat her better than any of these men do—so I'll have to read book four by sign-up time and I hope there's no very major continuity for those two in there. This one is a murder mystery about tax dodging, and gets a lot of humour out of its subject matter but also some genuinely cool and evocative settings (second most notable book set in the Channel Islands, I reckon, after Sir Isumbras at the Ford). As with previous books it's partly narrated in first person by Hilary and partly epistolary—this time in the form of messages sent by telex, which was a new word for me, which just goes to show how technology progresses. I did think it was pretty badly let down by the (rather Arthurian) rape-by-deception played for comedy; the comedic treatment of sex in these books is a bit of a thing—sometimes it's hilarious, sometimes it goes too far. I have bought book four and it's due to arrive tomorrow, so we shall see.
regshoe: (<3)
Slightly belated as I've just got back from a break and seen that creator reveals have happened!

My Kidnapped gift was by [archiveofourown.org profile] Carmilla—thank you :D



The Inside of a House (11395 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 2/2
Fandom: The Longest Journey - E. M. Forster
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Stewart Ansell/Rickie Elliot
Characters: Rickie's Daughter (The Longest Journey), Rickie Elliot, Stewart Ansell
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Character Death Fix, Domesticity, Kid Fic, Minor Character Death, Disability
Summary:

Rickie's daughter survives. Things go differently.



I've wanted to write this fic since [personal profile] phantomtomato first requested it two years ago; it took a bit of a long time to come together, but I loved writing it now. ♥
regshoe: Black and white illustration of a man, Alan, in 18th-century dress, jubilantly raising his arms for a hug (Come to my arms!)
[community profile] raremaleslashex works have revealed! I have received a lovely Kidnapped fic which I think lives up to its excellent summary :D

A Careful Touch (2995 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Kidnapped | David Balfour Series - Robert Louis Stevenson
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: David Balfour/Alan Breck Stewart
Characters: David Balfour, Alan Breck Stewart
Additional Tags: Fishing, Fencing, Play Fighting, Intimacy, First Kiss
Summary:

David and Alan at the Heugh of Corrynakiegh (k-i-s-s-i-n-g).



The author tells me they've shipped Alan/Davie for a long time but never written it before (indeed, I don't think any of the other fandom regulars were signed up), so I am curious to find out who they are!

And it's an exciting day for exchanges generally, with the Yuletide schedule just posted. The change in deadline/reveals timing is slightly disorienting—this will be my eighth Yuletide, reveals have been at 9am on the 25th for as long as I've been doing the exchange and I'd developed a nice little routine around them—but I think it'll work. Now I have to think what fandoms I might nominate—anyone else got any ideas...?
regshoe: Close-up of a woman, Jannet from NTS Kidnapped, wearing a bonnet and shawl; she holds her chin in one hand and pulls a frowning face (Jannet hmmm)
It's been a while since I've done any of this figuring-out-canon-details meta, and writing this reminded me how much fun it can be :)

Anyway: where is the house of Shaws?

Ooh, Cramond, fancy! )
regshoe: Black and white illustration of two men, Alan and Davie, in eighteenth-century dress shaking hands; a thistle grows between them (Good-bye)
My new favourite theory about the Appin murder: actually, Mungo Campbell [Colin the Fox's nephew and the only eyewitness to the murder] did it!


This looks like a very worthy project, and the blog is full of the sort of detailed book nerdery I love. A bit of digging suggests they have published an edition of Kidnapped, and it differs in some surprising ways from previous versions of the text (David sets out not from Essendean, but the less romantic 'Ogilvy'); I am eager to see what further light it might shed on the vexed question of how old David is and what time it was when Ransome was murdered, but it seems to be sadly difficult to get hold of. As it is, the blog has a few fun meta posts about the book.

('Ogilvy' is pretty interesting, actually—the name of a prominent Jacobite family, and so another piece of the Jacobitism in Davie's background that complicates the simple Jacobite-Whig dichotomy... Both the original magazine text and the first book edition have 'Essendean', so I suppose it comes from the manuscript, and can only guess at this editor's reasons for preferring it. I'm not sure why it's less romantic than Essendean, though?)


I meant to share this when I posted the last set of D. K. Broster papers, but in the excitement of 'The Daughter of the House' I forgot: If you don't feel like reading the 9,000 or so words of very obscure French Royalist history in 'The Happy Warrior', here's a passage which may be of wider interest on female/AFAB soldiers in the French army:

He witnessed the horrors of the sack of Thuin—largely the work of the Hungarians, Croats and Wallachians—and, a few days afterwards, cut down in self-defence a French foot soldier who, as he was preparing to give him the coup de grace, called out, “Mercy! I am a woman.” It was true. The young man had her conveyed to a convent at Thuin, and went next day to see her; there was no hope of saving her. She had followed her lover to the war. It was not very unusual for women to fight in the French ranks, and among the émigrés themselves was a certain Chevalier de Haussey with her husband, passing as his brother. The ‘Chevalier’ was cited as a model of every soldierly virtue—“she was ugly enough for a man,” observes Neuilly ungallantly—and though her sex was suspected no one dared to make any allusion to it. She buried her husband with her own hands at the defence of the canal of Louvain, was captured at Quiberon, condemned to death and saved by some Breton women. Neuilly saw her again in 1814, still wearing man’s attire, in the Palais-Royal; she was a Chevalier de St. Louis[1].

[1]Her real name was de Bennes, and her full story may be read in Comte Gérard de Contades’ Emigres et Chouans.
(The book referred to is available here, if anyone who can read French would like to investigate further!)


[community profile] once_upon_fic nominations are open! I'm trying to decide on ballads with interesting fic potential...
regshoe: Black and white photograph of Robert Louis Stevenson; he sits writing at a desk and looks up at the camera with raised eyebrow (RLS)
I learnt 'The Silver Tassie' many years ago via Emily Smith's lovely musical rendition, and it's been a good one for Alan/Davie feelings since they became my OTP—the sad, inevitable parting of lovers as the narrator goes off to fight in foreign lands, the places mentioned are pretty much the right ones for Alan leaving Davie in Cramond and sailing for France... so I thought I would write a ficlet about it :D

It’s not the roar o sea or shore (886 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Kidnapped - Robert Louis Stevenson
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: David Balfour/Alan Breck Stewart
Characters: David Balfour, Alan Breck Stewart
Additional Tags: Future Fic, Angst with a Hopeful Ending
Summary:

Another parting.

regshoe: (Explaining Alan)
Here is the draft timeline, and here is the logic of how I worked it out and the problems encountered. It's a tricky one; as I remarked earlier, there are five exact dates in the book and every one of them is at least difficult to reconcile with other information given about the timeline, if not definitely contradictory. Again, I would much appreciate any thoughts you have here on the counting, reasoning, decisions made or anything else.

Bit of a tl;dr here, I'm afraid... )
regshoe: Black and white photograph of Robert Louis Stevenson; he sits writing at a desk and looks up at the camera with raised eyebrow (RLS)
Robert Louis Stevenson's father originally intended that his son should follow his own profession, lighthouse engineering, and was disappointed when Louis chose instead to pursue a literary life. However, RLS made the right decision in not becoming an engineer; as an inspection of the text of Kidnapped reveals, he could not do maths.

As with my Raffles and Flight of the Heron timelines, I'll make another post detailing how I worked all this out and the various problems involved. I'm putting this on Dreamwidth before publishing it on the website partly because it is so difficult, and I'm afraid I may have missed things, lost count or made errors in logic somewhere. If you would like to, I'd much appreciate any criticism of the counting and reasoning detailed in these two posts!

The timeline... )
regshoe: A woman in a black Victorian-style dress, holding an acoustic guitar and raising one hand to the audience (Frances)
This fic is something I was originally thinking vaguely of writing for Yuletide, but there ended up not being time during the exchange, so here it is as a New Year's Resolution. :)

The idea came from combining [personal profile] garonne's Yuletide letter, which mentioned ‘fic that shows little snapshots of characters' lives over a long period of time’ as a like, and her own fic ‘A-Roving No More’, which does just that so well, on the one hand; and on the other hand, the historical future of Allan Breck Stewart—who never returned permanently to Scotland, but lived out the rest of his days in France. What might our Alan and David’s long future look like in that world, thought I?...

And knowing what to keep (12134 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Kidnapped - Robert Louis Stevenson
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: David Balfour/Alan Breck Stewart
Characters: David Balfour, Original Characters
Additional Tags: Post-Canon, POV outsiders
Summary:

Over many years, the laird of Shaws makes a choice.



(The title is from Kenny Rogers’s ‘The Gambler’, via the play soundtrack, but this is otherwise entirely a book fic.)
regshoe: Black and white picture of a man reading a large book (Reading 2)
The last few books of the year, plus a couple that I read for Yuletide reasons and hence didn't post about at the time. :)

Re-read Persuasion by Jane Austen (1817). Aww, this one was very well worth a re-read—one of my favourites by Austen, I think. I love Anne very much, and I enjoy the quiet and powerful longing of the developing relationship, and of course I love Sophia Croft and her husband very much too. I was also especially struck this time by the sense of a wider world beyond the limited social sphere of the immediate events, which all the naval characters and discussion of Navy life provide. Yeah, these books are actually set in the same world as the Hornblower novels, I can see it...

Irresolute Catherine by Violet Jacob (1908). This was a disappointment, I'm afraid! It's another one set in contemporary Wales; the title Catherine was engaged to one man, broke it off and later became engaged to another man, but at the time the book opens is still wavering between them. Although, to be fair to Jacob, the one Catherine ultimately chooses is less bad than the other, neither love interest is an especially good prospect—they're both possessively jealous in the really unappealing way, and both run roughshod over Catherine's 'irresoluteness'. Also I really disliked the way the important moment of Catherine's gaining the courage to make her own choices is inspired by a) a factually incorrect belief about one of her love interests treating her badly, instead of the various correct instances she could have come to recognise, b) jealousy of another woman who is described and treated by the narrative in decidedly unfeministical terms.

Cousin Phillis and Other Stories by Elizabeth Gaskell (written and originally published from 1850 to 1864; this collection published 2010). This was a bit of a puzzle; according to my reading log I read at least the novella 'Cousin Phillis' itself in 2016, but reading it again now I did not remember or recognise anything about it (and I can remember at least a little about all the other books I read around the same time and haven't re-read since). Is Gaskell particularly unmemorable? I wouldn't have thought so. No idea whether I read the other stories then too. Anyway, this is a collection of short stories plus one novella, mostly dealing with Gaskell's favourite theme of changes in society in the first half of the nineteenth century as experienced in the northwest of England, especially Manchester and its environs. I enjoyed them on the whole! One story is a sympathetic take on the problem of the unmarried mother, with interesting differences from the novel Ruth. A couple more, including 'Cousin Phillis', deal with women being jilted by men and subsequently remaining single; the men involved are too much Really Not Worth It to see the stories as especially tragic, but they're enjoyable, and the rural northwestern settings are very nice.

The Killing of the Red Fox: An Investigation into the Appin Murder by Seamus Carney (1989). Good readable account of the Appin murder and its surroundings. Much of the detail of the trial was not new to me, having already read the trial records, but Carney puts some things in context that I hadn't fully understood and adds a lot of interesting background material which was new to me (apart from having seen some of it in [personal profile] muccamukk's meta posts!). Among other things, definite primary evidence for historical Allan Breck's age at the time of the murder being about thirty, the fact that at least one witness provably lied at the trial so as to incriminate Allan, and more thorough information about Allan's later life and French military career than anyone else seems to have turned up. (I have begun adding this to his Wikipedia article.) Having gone through the history, Carney summarises what other people have since written about the murder, calling Kidnapped 'an adventure yarn that will endure as long as the art of narrative'; he then gives his own judgements on the mystery, concluding that a) the shot was fired by Allan Breck and b) while it's not certain that James of the Glens wasn't involved, he probably wasn't, and the jury were certainly not justified in convicting him based on the available evidence; and finally sets out a speculative theory of exactly what happened, in which Allan Breck planned the murder in concert with James's eldest son Allan Beg Stewart and an unknown third man, without James's knowledge. So there you go.

And for Yuletide...

Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland by John Gregorson Campbell (1900). Read as research for my supernatural Kidnapped story! Much of the book is about the fairies, and this gave me lots of good material, but I was enjoying it enough to continue onto the rest, which covers other superstitions such as the Glaistig (supernatural beings associated with particular places; I'm sure Ardroy has one) and the water-horse (my goodness, Highland water-horses are brutal! Brrr). Gregorson Campbell thoroughly disapproves of superstition, and occasionally gets sidetracked from the accounts of supernatural creatures and folktales to go on a digression explaining this to the reader; this made an entertaining contrast with Robert Kirk of The Secret Commonwealth, who believes what he's writing about.

And re-read Howards End by E. M. Forster (1910) Oh, I love this book. ♥ Characters, settings, themes, prose, all really wonderful. Of course I was canon-reviewing to write Margaret/Ruth femslash, so I especially paid attention to them, and I love them both and their relationship very much; I was also especially struck by Miss Avery, who so well understands what's going on and sees everything right in the end.
regshoe: A Jacobite white rose (White rose)
That Loyalty of Friendship. Being the Adventures of David Balfour, Ewen Cameron and other Notable Persons in and about the Year 1753: How Keith Windham saw a Quarrel made and mended; how Mr Balfour took a bold Step, and suffer’d a great Misfortune, in which there was yet a great Happiness; the History of Alan Breck Stewart and Dr Archibald Cameron, with divers other Jacobites; of Falsehood and Truth in Friendship and Politics; and treating also of Amity and Love between Jacobite and Whig.

At Ye Jacobites By Name | On AO3
Fandoms: Kidnapped (book), The Flight of the Heron
Relationships: Ewen/Keith, Alan/David
Characters: Ewen Cameron, Keith Windham, Alan Breck Stewart, David Balfour, Archibald Cameron, with various other canonical, historical and original characters in minor roles
Rating: T
Content warnings: Major character death (spoilery details are available in the beginning notes)
Length: 118,175 words*

*The AO3 work does not include the prologue, which I posted separately, but does include the endnotes, which I had to make into their own chapter because they're too long to go in the actual endnotes section. Hence the discrepancy in wordcounts.

This fic began in June last year in Glen Nevis, if I remember correctly, where [personal profile] luzula and I were discussing FotH fic ideas; she floated the idea of a Kidnapped crossover, and this seeming promising, challenged me to write it. I thought this was all very intriguing and began turning the idea over in my mind; and in August, having finished the other things I was working on at the time, I started to write it. Throughout 2022 I'd been stretching my writing muscles, gradually writing longer and plottier fics, and by now I felt up to the challenge of something that would clearly be significantly longer and plottier yet. And so here, somewhat more than a year later, it is: not only my longest fic to date but more than five times longer than the next one before that, which is kind of mind-boggling.

(Right, [personal profile] luzula, you have to write that Flemington crossover now :D )

Both [personal profile] luzula and [personal profile] sanguinity have been utterly amazing beta readers, and I cannot thank them enough. ♥ Also deserving a mention is NTS Kidnapped, which really has done a great deal for my general spirits this year as well as keeping up my fannish love for Kidnapped; you may spot a reference or two in the fic. :)

I think I will not write another longfic for a little while! Although I've really enjoyed writing this, it has been frustrating having other ideas popping up and not being able to fit in writing them around the longfic, as well as having to limit participation in exchanges. I have various shorter ideas percolating, and in any case intend to spend the next couple of months writing loads of fic for Yuletide.
regshoe: A Jacobite white rose (White rose)
Well, here we go! This is the prologue of my Flight of the Heron/Kidnapped crossover longfic, which is about 117,000 words long and which I hope to post shortly under the title

That Loyalty of Friendship. Being the Adventures of David Balfour, Ewen Cameron and other Notable Persons in and about the Year 1753: How Keith Windham saw a Quarrel made and mended; how Mr Balfour took a bold Step, and suffer’d a great Misfortune, in which there was yet a great Happiness; the History of Alan Breck Stewart and Dr Archibald Cameron, with divers other Jacobites; of Falsehood and Truth in Friendship and Politics; and treating also of Amity and Love between Jacobite and Whig.

(I had a great struggle trying to come up with a title, but realised I was taking the wrong approach: what it really needed was a mock-eighteenth-century overly-long title in the style of Kidnapped itself! I'm quite pleased with this one.)

I decided to post the prologue as a separate work on AO3, as motivation for myself, a preview for you, and to preserve the chapter numbering (I don't think AO3 will let me call the second 'chapter' Chapter 1). It's not posted on the website yet, as there'll be no need to separate out the prologue there and I still need to figure out the structure and HTML coding for the rest of it.

Prologue: A Meeting on the Road (1263 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Kidnapped - Robert Louis Stevenson, The Flight of the Heron - D. K. Broster
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: David Balfour, Alan Breck Stewart, Ewen Cameron
Additional Tags: Crossover, Missing Scene, Post-Canon
Series: Part 1 of That Loyalty of Friendship
Summary:

On their way through Appin after fleeing from the scene of the Red Fox's murder, David and Alan meet a familiar friend.


:)
regshoe: A Jacobite white rose (White rose)
New on the website: Jacobite songbook! Do say if you spot anything missing, or if there are any other Jacobite songs you'd especially like included. :D

Also on the website, I've been messing about with CSS and making some aesthetic updates (messing about with CSS is such an absorbingly fun thing to do), so the updates section on the home page is now in a sidebar, and some of the section front pages have a two-column layout to give a somewhat more equal status to FotH and Kidnapped. And I've figured out how to make responsive HTML work, so the site now looks a bit better on mobile (or otherwise very narrow) browsers.

And I've found a few extra things to add to the adaptations of Kidnapped page, and thus have inadvertently made a heartbreaking discovery. Steeleye Span, an English folk-rock group and my favourite band, have recorded several Scottish Jacobite songs, and these songs have been amongst my favourites of theirs for years, even before I got into Jacobite fandoms. Now I know where they came from: in the 1970s Steeleye performed in a stage adaptation of Kidnapped, playing a soundtrack of Jacobite music some of which later ended up on their next album. This was a one-off event and I will never get to watch it, which was tragic enough before I found out that the adaptation included both books. Thus a double tragedy: I can't watch my favourite band perform my favourite book, and I wouldn't have wanted to anyway. (Maddy Prior played the lass at the change-house! There's a finale song called 'Jacobite Rock'!) Woe, alas, cruel fate, etc. I will try to keep liking the songs.

Look at these beautiful illustrations from a 1948 edition of Kidnapped, kindly uploaded and shared by [tumblr.com profile] chiropteracupola on Tumblr! Besides getting the height difference approximately right (it's not quite a foot, but Davie is significantly taller), I think this is the only 'official' (i.e. non-fanart) visual representation of Alan I've seen that actually includes his smallpox scars. (Even the 2016 radio adaptation conspicuously cuts that bit from an otherwise almost verbatim use of David's initial description of him.) Actually my first thought was that Alan looks disconcertingly like the gentleman with the thistle-down hair (in the Portia Rosenberg illustrations from the book, not the TV series; it's that nose, I think); I was mildly alarmed by this until, on consideration, I decided that Alan looking just a little bit like an evil fairy is actually very appropriate. Anyway, I love these pictures very much; I must get myself a copy of the relevant edition. —ETA that I have found this edition on the Internet Archive, where more illustrations can be seen, albeit not in quite such good quality.

The Flight of the Heron ebook is getting close to being done! I don't think I've got a proofreader yet, so would anyone like to volunteer? (How this works: I will send you an ebook in format of your choice; you read it keeping a sharp eye out for any typos or formatting errors and report back on what you find.)
regshoe: A Jacobite white rose (White rose)
I was delighted to learn that Big Country, whose song 'In a Big Country' featured very memorably in NTS Kidnapped, have another song that's actually about the Appin Murder:



Lyrics here. The first part of the song is from the perspective of the murderer—though avoids any actual statement of identity—and the POV then shifts to James of the Glens. I think 'John, John' refers to John Beg and John More Maccoll, two servants of James's who were examined as witnesses during his trial (and treated shamefully by the prosecution). Also note the prominent use of the word 'kidnapped', which I take it is a reference :D

Thanks to [personal profile] troisoiseaux for this: details of a Jacobite drinking glass in the Met Museum, New York. The inscription is a version of 'God Save the King' with Jacobite lyrics—the song was only just being adopted as the national anthem around this time, and apparently there were both Jacobite and Hanoverian versions in existence before the Hanoverians made it an official thing.

Thanks to [personal profile] scintilla10 for this: Miss Broster Comes to the Highlands. I wasn't sure quite what to do with this fascinating article, but it will be very much of interest to some of you, so I've just put it up on the website. It's a lovely little glimpse of what Broster was like as a person, as well as her travels in Scotland in connection with her Jacobite fiction—how good to hear that she had 'the loveliest speaking voice'!

I don't know how reliable this kind of technology is, but pretty interesting: Death masks recreate face of Bonnie Prince Charlie. I like how he looks! And it is reasonably like his portraits, which would seem to be a sign of reliability.
regshoe: A row of old books in a wooden bookshelf (Bookshelf)
I've been digging into some Kidnapped fannish historical detail by reading the records of the trial of James of the Glens for the murder of Colin Campbell of Glenure! These are collected in Cobbett’s Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes and Misdemeanors, vol. XIX (published 1813), of which there are various PDFs floating about on the internet, mostly of terrible quality; the best I've been able to find is here [updated with link that should now be working].

It is really fascinating reading, and—even without the full knowledge of exactly how much of the evidence was perjured and exactly what the prosecution did to obtain it—stands out as an incredible example of what you might call the disingenuous injustice of official evil. Poor James.

Anyway, I made some notes as I went along of points of particular fannish-historical interest, either in general to Kidnapped and Flight of the Heron or in particular to my WIP. I take a 'take them or leave them' attitude to historical details about the real Allan Breck Stewart vis-a-vis his fictional counterpart (there are at least two certain real details—his height and his father's name—that Stevenson contradicts); I might use some of these in fic if they're ever particularly useful and will happily ignore or contradict them otherwise.

Historical notes )
regshoe: (Reading 1)
[community profile] raremaleslashex has revealed, and I have received this utterly lovely Armadale fic. I had high hopes from the 'Birds' tag, and it does not disappoint—with the ornithology and some really adorable shippiness, this is a lovely Allan/Ozias story and perfectly tailored to me. <3 I do not think the author is anyone I know, so I'm curious to find out their identity!

A call from the orchards (2384 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Armadale - Wilkie Collins
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Main Allan Armadale/Ozias Midwinter | Allan Armadale
Characters: Main Allan Armadale, Ozias Midwinter | Allan Armadale
Additional Tags: Sharing a Bed, Birds, Friends to Lovers, Fluff, Insomnia, Post-Canon, Cuddling
Summary:

Ozias Midwinter has trouble sleeping; this he has long known and accepted.

His friend Allan Armadale is keen to aid him.




Further recs )
regshoe: (Explaining Alan)
At long last, the collection of contemporary reviews of Kidnapped is up at the website! I had a lot of fun researching these and putting the page together; apart from anything else, just seeing the language people in 1886 use to talk about books is really fascinating. Now, reviewers had a lot to say about this book (the sheer volume of material in comparison with The Flight of the Heron rather surprised me at first, but then RLS was a lot more famous than DKB even at the time). You may not feel like reading through the entire 27,000-odd words of reviews, in which case I have put together some highlights, summarised here with graphs!

Is Kidnapped better than Treasure Island?
Debate on this question raged intensely and fiercely in the reviews; here are the final results:

Pie chart showing reviewers' opinions on Kidnapped versus Treasure Island. The slices are as follows: 'Kidnapped is not as good as Treasure Island', 50%; 'Kidnapped is as good as Treasure Island', 13%; 'Kidnapped is better than Treasure Island', 19%; 'It's complicated', 19%.' title='Kidnapped vs Treasure Island

No opinion has an overall majority! But a plurality of reviewers think that Kidnapped is not as good as Treasure Island. I am very much looking forward to reading Treasure Island for myself so I can weigh in on this important question. 'It's complicated' opinions included this balanced judgement from Truth: ‘Though nothing like so good a boy’s book as “Treasure Island,” it is incomparably superior to it and to everything else Mr. Stevenson has yet done in the amazing imaginative force of its conceptions and of its descriptions.’


What other books is Kidnapped like?
Many of the reviews compare Kidnapped to other books—either specific titles or the work of an author in general—and I've collected these here:

Bar chart showing other books and authors compared to Kidnapped by reviewers. The bars are as follows: 'Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson', 20 mentions; 'Daniel Defoe', 9 mentions; 'Robinson Cruse by Daniel Defoe', 6; 'Walter Scott', 5; 'Rob Rov by Walter Scott', 4; 'Waverley by Walter Scott', 3; 'King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard' and 'Guy Mannering by Walter Scott', 2 each; 'The Lay of the Last Minstrel by Walter Scott', 'Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border by Walter Scott', 'A Legend of Montrose by Walter Scott', 'Thomas Carlyle', 'Thomas Mayne Reid', 'The Wandering Heir by Charles Reade', 1 each.

Between Treasure Island—an unsurprising most popular comparison—and Robsinson Crusoe, reviewers seem to prefer highlighting the 'boy's adventure story' aspect of the book more than the 'Jacobite-themed historical novel' aspect in their comparisons—though Scott's Jacobite novels also make a respectable appearance. Also interestingly, three reviewers expressed the view that Kidnapped is notably unlike The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.


What are the best bits of it?
Many reviewers pick out particular scenes as their favourites—some quoting at considerable length from them—and here are their opinions summarised:

Bar chart showing the best scenes in Kidnapped as judged by reviewers. The bars are as follows: 'The bagpipe duel', 8; 'The siege of the round-house', 7; 'David's peril in the tower at the house of Shaws', 4; 'The visit to Cluny's Cage' and 'David and Alan's conversation in the wood of Lettermore', 3 each; 'The quarrel in the heather', 2; 'Aftermath of the siege of the round-house', 'David's meeting with Mr Henderson', 'David's sufferings on Earraid', 'The Appin Murder', 'The blind catechist on Mull', 'David and Alan hiding atop the rocks in Glencoe', 1 each.

The most popular scene is the bagpipe duel between Alan and Robin Oig. The siege of the round-house is also very popular—and in fact I found it a few times excerpted in 'here's a good bit from a book' sections in newspapers that were not also reviews, and if I'd counted those too it would have come out on top. I can't say the reviewers have especially good taste in those choices; and only two of them mentioned the objective best scene in the book, the quarrel in the heather.


Who will read it?
Nearly everyone weighed in on this question; this is only a selection!

‘...likely to live, and to be a favourite with readers of all sorts and classes.’ —The Spectator

‘Young readers will go wild over it, and the older ones are not likely to lay it down until they read it through.’ —The Atlanta Constitution

‘...every boy, young or old...’ —The School Journal

‘...will find acceptance in the hands of the old as well as the young, and be eagerly read and enjoyed wherever the English language is spoken.’ —American Magazine

‘it is a book which men, we fancy, should like quite as well as boys, and which some men might like better than some boys.’ —Lyttelton Times

‘...every reader of the World will probably become a reader of Mr. Stevenson’s book...’ —The New York World

‘...all boys (of from twelve to sixty)...’ —advertisement appearing in various publications

‘...will please all classes of readers, and here and there are touches of character that will throw Scotchmen into ecstasies.’ —The Daily Telegraph (Napier, New Zealand)

‘...a vast constituency of admirers...’ —Toronto Daily Mail

‘...he has written a charming book for boys—and as usual, when he does this, everybody reads it.’ —The Civil & Military Gazette (Lahore)

‘It is a story for boys, and it is one that men also will read with great pleasure.’ —The Scotsman

‘...thoroughly interesting to readers of all ages and both sexes...’ —Salisbury and Winchester Journal [the only review to acknowledge explicitly that women or girls might enjoy the book!]


How manly is it?
A very important question.

‘...a story which simply tells how a manly young hero of the old type...’ —The Athenaeum

‘...the atmosphere one breathes in “Treasure Island” and “Kidnapped,” written ostensibly for boys, is bracing and manly.’ —Salisbury and Winchester Journal

‘...his art is guided always by a pure and right-minded manliness [...] the story, as we read it, could have been the fruit only of a perception of the intimate spiritual fellowship between the simple-mindedness of childhood and the manliness of manhood.’ —The Church Review

‘The characteristics of this story are manliness and an exact comprehension of the Highland character.’ —Catholic World

‘Davie’s relation is as manly as it is stirring.’ —advertisement appearing in various publications

But also: ‘...[Alan] is as tender as a woman to his companion...’ —The Morning Post


There's no het in it; how weird is that??
‘...as in “Treasure Island,” he has succeeded in telling a story in which women and feminine influence play positively no part. There is no love-making in “Kidnapped,” and, with one exception, no woman takes any share in the action. There are some pretty and touching passages illustrative of the unspoken love of man for man which has been a finer side of human intercourse since the days of David and Jonathan. But of the conventional heroine and the yet more conventional love scene, which are wont to appear even in so-called books for boys, Mr. Stevenson will have none.’ —St. James’s Gazette

‘To be able to make a story in which there are no love scenes, thoroughly interesting to readers of all ages and both sexes, implies a triumph of skill.’ —Salisbury and Winchester Journal

‘...without the interest of love, with scarce so much as a woman in it, indeed; appealing to us by none of the means through which the novel is wont to address us; enchaining and fascinating us by the simple force of the world-old love for an out-and-out story...’ —The Church Review

‘Kidnapped is a novel without a love-story running through it, and it is the more to be commended for that.’ —Catholic World

‘Here is a story without a particle of love or sentiment in it, but it warms the heart, stirs the pulses, and invigorates even a wearied reader.’ —Life

‘There is hardly a woman in the book, and there is no hint of a courtship or a marriage, but for all that it is one of the most thrilling stories in print.’ —The Atlanta Constitution
regshoe: (Explaining Alan)
I've been adding bits and pieces to the website over the last few weeks (and have made a 'Latest additions' section for the front page, for handy navigation thereof), and here's a new meta piece—which I shall experiment with posting there and linking here with a few more informal notes.

The language of Kidnapped: Dialogue tags (with a comparison to Flight of the Heron)

This was an interesting investigation! I started by basically just repeating the same things I'd done for FotH, and ended up finding some illustrations of what I think are the general differences between Broster's and Stevenson's writing styles. Further comparison of more general features of the two books—perhaps looking at things like sentence and paragraph length, proportion of dialogue, punctuation and vocabulary—would be very much worth doing to throw further light on this.

Only two of my four Kidnapped fics are in canon-style first person (well, one of the others is in first person but it barely has any dialogue). I see I do use Stevenson's favourite 'Dialogue,' said pronoun construction, though I don't manage such a strong bias towards it as Stevenson has. And I've never tried to use present-tense dialogue tags in an otherwise past-tense fic; given the commonness of errors in tense use as mistakes in fic I feel it's a risky move to try doing it deliberately, but perhaps I will try for a better canon pastiche the next time I want to write a really exciting first-person adventure fic. :D
regshoe: Black and white illustration of a man swinging from a rope below the bow of a ship; illustration from 'Kidnapped' by Louis Rhead (Alan)
Stumbled across while idly doing research for the website—a BBC Radio adaptation of Kidnapped from 2016 was repeated recently, and is now available to listen on BBC Sounds—but only for the next couple of weeks. So there you go, hurry if you'd like to give it a listen! I intend to do so, and I'll report back here on whether it's any good. :D

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