EDITOR’S BOOK REVIEW
CHRISTINE PRISLAND shares her love of books, good storytelling, and a particular author that inspires and delights her—Alexander McCall Smith.
As an avid reader I look for books that entertain, provide hope, and enhance my understanding of the human condition and the various dilemmas and situations we face daily. The author I turn to most often is Alexander McCall Smith, a Scotsman who was born in Africa, and taught medical law at universities in the UK and abroad. He lives in Edinburgh.
His background and focus on bioethics are reflected in the content of the various series he has written, including The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency set in Botswana, Isabel Dalhousie and 44 Scotland Street, both set in Edinburgh, his children’s books, and many other books. A reviewer in The Sunday Times Scotland wrote, “His talent is to see the god in small things.”
Why do I treasure and return to his books over and over again?
He has a gift for intelligent story telling. His characters engage often in inner philosophical musings about life in general and puzzle over the ethical and kind approach to the ordinary and often mundane things we all encounter. Each book resonates with optimism, kindness, understanding, hope, peace, and a respect for tradition while adapting to a changing world. He ponders over thoughts on how to respond to prickly people and situations, and how to maintain optimism. Never preachy, and with gentle dry humour and simplicity, he writes with a tone that is both elegant and polite. His books make me think and learn!
Each book resonates with optimism,
kindness, understanding, hope, peace, and
a respect for tradition while adapting to a changing world.
In a recent email to his readers introducing a new book, he writes:
“If love is unconditional, then how can it have any conditions? That is true, of course, unless you interpret the title as referring to the circumstances in which unconditional love may flourish. Or unless you read it as suggesting that what we commonly think of as unconditional love actually does have certain conditions attached to it that may come into operation only in extreme circumstances. Isabel herself would love a discussion of all that, but for most of us, who have busy lives to lead, life is too short to get too tangled up in debates of that nature. The important thing, for most of us, is that there is love and that love is able to do its work to bring about the healing that our poor, injured world so desperately needs.
“Isabel believes in courtesy and consideration for others. She is saddened by the bitter divisions we have allowed to grow up in our societies—divisions in which people glower at one another from behind barricades of mistrust and anger. That is the polar opposite of what she wants for the world. We must love another or die… Isabel believes in the fundamental truth of that.“I love writing these novels. They take me to a world in which the virtues are appreciated. But they also help to reinforce the belief I have that our civilization—that set of values and beliefs that we have built up over the centuries—will survive crude attempts to destroy it by those who believe in nothing very much. Fiction gives us an emotional and intellectual lifeline to survive the horrors of an unhappy, warring world. It is our comfort in times of trial.”
And finally,
“By acts of love in our own lives,
by acts of friendship, by the simple cherishing
of those who daily cross our path,
and those who do not,
by these acts, I think, are we shown what might be;
by these acts can we transform that small corner
of terra firma that is given to us…”
—Alexander McCall Smith,
Bertie Plays the Blues, 44 Scotland Street series.
Christine Prisland