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Sunshine on Scotland Street

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
44 SCOTLAND STREET - Book 8
The residents and neighbors of 44 Scotland Street and the city of Edinburgh come to vivid life in these gently satirical, wonderfully perceptive serial novels, featuring six-year-old Bertie, a remarkably precocious boy—just ask his mother.  

From social media to the finer points of human behavior, this episode of Alexander McCall Smith's popular 44 Scotland Street series provides an entertaining commentary on a small corner of modern life in Edinburgh where, contrary to received wisdom, the sun nearly always shines.
Angus Lordie and Domenica Macdonald are finally tying the knot. Unsurprisingly, Angus is not quite prepared and averting a wedding-day disaster falls to his best man, Matthew. When the newlyweds finally head off on their honeymoon, Angus's dog Cyril goes to stay with the Pollocks—to the delight of one member of the family, and the utter despair of another. The long-suffering Bertie knows firsthand how stringent his mother's rules can be, and he resolves to help Cyril set off on an adventure. Meanwhile, Big Lou becomes a viral Internet sensation, and the incurable narcissist Bruce meets his match in the form of a doppelganger neighbor, who proposes a plan that could change both their lives.
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    • Kirkus

      July 15, 2014
      An eighth season of charminglyfeatherweight escapades, moral dilemmas, and errors committed and corrected andsometimes simply brushed aside by the denizens of 44 Scotland St. and itsEdinburgh environs. Miraculously, anthropologistDomenica Macdonald succeeds in marrying painter Angus Lordie even though Angushas made no arrangements for a wedding ring or a honeymoon or the gaping holein the kilt he plans to wear. No sooner has the happy couple taken their vowsthan the best man, gallery owner Matthew Harmony, is approached by Bo, afilmmaker who's a friend of his triplets' au pair, Anna, who wants to film afly-on-the-wall documentary of Matthew's absolutely normal family, which he'sconvinced Danish audiences will love. Bertie Pollock, the 6-year-old to whomAngus entrusts his beloved dog, Cyril, while he's away, has to deal with thefact that his mother, Irene, doesn't want a dog in the house. Convinced thatsomething ails Cyril, she starts him in psychotherapy, and Bertie contemplatesprotective measures that are bound to backfire. Bertie's father, Stuart, inchescloser to confronting his misgivings about the uncanny resemblance of his babyson Ulysses' ears to those of his wife's former therapist, Dr. Hugo Fairbairn, now prudently decamped to Aberdeen. And in the most inventive of the plots thatswirl and churn and then dissolve, narcissistic surveyor Bruce Anderson meetshis exact physical double, a man who would certainly be his long-lost twinbrother if he had one, and Jonathan proposes a mad scheme Bruce unaccountablyaccepts. A tighter focus on fewer charactersthan the earlier installments (Bertie Plays the Blues, 2013, etc.) doesn't pay offin additional depth or sharper conflict but generates more serial complicationsper capita for a crew that's endlessly open to adventures while remainingimmitigably themselves.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from June 1, 2014
      In his Scotland Street series, now in its eighth installment, McCall Smith follows a core group of people, all of whom once lived in or very near the same Edinburgh apartment house (44 Scotland Street). We watch as they do things everyone does, like fix dinner, quarrel, match wits, and fall in love, but also as they do things only people in Edinburgh can, like shop at the farmers market held on Saturdays beneath the volcanic crag of Edinburgh Castle. And McCall Smith does something else here, even beyond what he does in his popular No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency series. He gives us each of his characters' points of view, moving deftly from one to the other. So, for example, we often get the point of view of six-year-old Bertie, oppressed son of Irene, who sees her son as a project. Bertie yearns to be 18 and move to Glasgow, forever away from Irene. We also tap into Irene's brain, her harassed husband's, and some of Bertie's classmates, along with Bruce the narcissist, Angus the portrait painter, and Angus' beloved dog, Cyril. McCall Smith does this very deftly, advancing the action (this latest has a wedding, a doppelgnger, and the continuing adventures of Matthew and Elspeth and the triplet infants) as we learn exactly what characters are thinking of each other and themselves. Humor and insight abound.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

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