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Rob Roy (Penguin Classics)

By: Walter Scott
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Classics
ISBN: 0140435549
ISBN-13: 9780140435542
Released: 29 Jul 2004
RRP: £9.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Testament to Verbosity - By: Mr. D. J. Read, 31 Jul 2007
The tale of Rob Roy follows Francis Osbaldistone, who rejects the family money making business for poetry. He is effectively disowned in favour of Rashleigh, & sent to the family home in Northumberland. While there he graduallly fallls in love with Diana Vernon, & uncovers some of the subterfuge of young Rashleigh. Rashleigh sets out to ruin Francis, & his entire family, forcing him to jounrey to the 'Hielands' in order to recruit Robin Macgregor to foil his plot.
But, this story could have been condensed considerably, & not to its detriment. Painfully long descriptions, running onto multiple pages when a paragraph could as easily covered it. But this was not my primary gripe. The biggest problem is with people like Macgregor, & Nicol, who speak with such strong, & antiquated Scottish accents (rendered into text), that you struggle to make head or tail of the conversations.
That said, you always seem to derive something more from a classic, than the run of the mill novels, & this is no different. But in this instance it is merely a sense of achievement for having struggled through such a book.
If you have already seen the film, expect surprises, for Rob Roy, in this, is almost a background character. The plot follows Francis, & Rob does not even appear in his true guise until halfway through the novel, & as such the book could hardly differ more from the dramtisation.
Scott - The Acquired Taste - By: Myrtle, 22 Jun 2002
Don't get me wrong, I love Nineteenth century fiction, but this novel leaves me bewildered at Scott's reputation. It hasn't travellled well (Austen's vintage is still full-bodied), but accepting the anachronisms, very little works for me. The characters are more stereotyped than a cowboy movie where the bad guys wear black hats. The whole thing felt lumpen & lifeless. I've read Ivanhoe & felt the same. Maybe I like Dumas too much.......
Superb! - By: , 22 Mar 2002
Few men can be credited with inventing an entire genre, but Sir Walter Scott is one of them. His ingenious intertwining of history & fiction created a type of novel that endures to this day.

And in Rob Roy, it is easy to see why. Yet the mechanism of history occupies only a secondary position; it is the young Francis Osbaldistone who occupies centre stage. His colourful adventures unfold in a flurry of action, the narrative stiffened by Scott's wonderful fluency & sublime descriptive powers. Combine this with the suspense & uncertainty surrounding Diana Vernon & Rob Roy in particular, & it would be difficult to imagine a more pleasing novel.

Certainly, Rob Roy is not as exuberant as Scott's other great work, Ivanhoe, but this is of little consequence. The book is an intricate tapestry of romance, adventure & mystery that simply oozes the irresistible charm of a masterpiece.


break through the pain barrier - By: john.maxwell@visto.com, 05 Dec 2001
Getting into this book means wading through an opening few scenes of London accountancy. It hurts, but it works

Once you have gotten through the early sections you follow the hero northwards, until you find him racing through the highlands & striving for the right to marry the beautiful, enigmatic & sly Di Vernon.

Not essentiallly a book about Rob Roy, although he does have a leading role. It is about the world of Rob Roy, which is full of brave, adventurous & unpredictable highlanders.