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In The Living Mountain, Nan Shepherd describes her trips to the Cairngorm Mountains in Scotland. Here she encounters a world that is at once breathtakingly beautiful and shockingly brutal. Her intense, poetic prose records and explores the rocks, rivers, creatures and hidden aspects of this remarkable landscape. Shepherd spent a lifetime searching for the 'true nature' of the Cairngorms; her quest led her to write this classic meditation on the grandeur of the mountains and the relationship of our imagination to the wild world around us. Like Cibulka and Maeterlinck, Shepherd's blend of essayism, personal narrative and focus on nature anticipates popular works such as The Eel Gospel, The Sea Book and H for Hawk.
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Scottish author Anna (Nan) Shepherd was born in Aberdeen in 1893, where she died in 1981. Her reputation as a writer is largely due to her three novels The Quarry Wood (1928), The Weatherhouse (1930) and A Pass in the Grampians (1933). She was passionate about nature and spent much of her life walking in the Scottish mountains, particularly the area west of Aberdeen and the Cairngorms. Today she is best remembered for The Living Mountain, written during World War 2 and first published in 1977. World War II and first published in 1977.
.Hi! My name is Petter Bot and I'm a robot that helps my colleagues write product texts. I'm getting better at English every day. If I have written something wrong, we apologize.
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