Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Rob Roy
Rob Roy | Sir Walter Scott
6 posts | 11 read | 9 to read
Rob Roy is a historical novel by Walter Scott. It is narrated by Frank Osbaldistone, the son of an English merchant who travels first to the North of England, and subsequently to the Scottish Highlands, to collect a debt stolen from his father. On the way he encounters the larger-than-life title character, Rob Roy MacGregor. The story takes place just before the 1715 Jacobite Rising, with much of Scotland in turmoil. Frank Osbaldistone, the narrator, quarrels with his father and is sent to stay with an uncle, Sir Hildebrand Osbaldistone, in Northumberland. Frank falls in love with Diana Vernon, Sir Hildebrand's niece, whose father has been forced to go into hiding because of his Jacobite sympathies. Frank's cousin, Rashleigh, steals important documents vital to the honour and economic solvency of Frank's father, William, and Frank pursues Rashleigh to Scotland. Several times his path crosses the mysterious and powerful figure Rob Roy MacGregor, known as Rob Roy, an associate of Sir Hildebrand. There is much confusion as the action shifts to the beautiful mountains and valleys around Loch Lomond. A British army detachment is ambushed and there is bloodshed. The eponymous Rob Roy is badly wounded at the Battle of Glen Shiel in 1719, in which a British army of Scots and English defeat a Jacobite and Spanish expedition that aimed to restore the Stuart monarchy. All of Sir Hildebrand's sons but Rashleigh are killed in the Jacobite Rising, and Rashleigh, too meets a bloody end. Following this, Frank inherits Sir Hildebrand's property and marries Diana. The novel is a brutally realistic depiction of the social conditions in Highland and Lowland Scotland in the early 18th century. Robert Louis Stevenson loved the novel from childhood, regarding it as the best novel of the greatest of all novelists.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Whalien99
Rob Roy | Walter Scott
Mehso-so

3 stars

blurb
Eggs
Rob Roy | Sir Walter Scott
post image

#ifyoulikethis #braveheart @Klou

Set on the eve of the 1715 Jacobite uprising, Rob Roy brilliantly evokes a Scotland on the verge of rebellion, blending historical fact and a novelist's imagination to create an incomparable portrait of intrigue, rivalry and romance.

Klou Brilliant! 4y
Eggs Thanks @klou 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 4y
56 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
Beccas
Rob Roy (Revised) | Walter Scott
post image

The inside of my library book 😃

blurb
Kristelh
Rob Roy (Revised) | Walter Scott
post image

#backpackEurope #scotland. Doing a bit of history of the McGregor clan and the Scottish outlaw, Rob Roy McGregor
JenP BookwormM

hilded So nice, Scotland is indeed a lovely country :) I will try to tag to see if it goes through @jenp & @bookwormm 6y
JenP Your top left photo looks like Machu Picchu 6y
Kristelh I think both are wrong . And I need to remove both 6y
See All 7 Comments
Kristelh Fixed 6y
ValerieAndBooks I have a friend who actually married a Rob Roy McGregor 😄 . And he goes by Rob Roy, not Rob. 6y
Kristelh @ValerieAndBooks , is he r/t the famous Rob Roy McGregor? 6y
ValerieAndBooks @Kristelh lol, I asked him the same thing when I met him, and he said his parents seem to think they are. Probably means there‘s no hard proof 😊 6y
20 likes1 stack add7 comments
blurb
Kristelh
Rob Roy (Revised) | Walter Scott
post image

#backpackEurope #Scotland
For some reason I can‘t find JenP or BookwormM to tag
#reading1001
#1001

Riveted_Reader_Melissa Litsy is being very contrarian lately @JenP 6y
JenP The tagging is a nightmare. I need to tag a few for the creativity points. 6y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa You can‘t find them to tag them, but if you just type them in, and send, they‘ll show up anyway. The search feature is not working though 6y
Kristelh Thanks! I was wondering if that was the case 6y
18 likes5 comments
blurb
kathleenaflynn
Rob Roy | Walter Scott

Wow this has a slow start. I'm reading it because Emily Bronte was a fan, but her tolerance for boredom must have exceeded my own. Does this get better? Or maybe I just don't know enough about Scottish history?

DGRachel I haven‘t tried this one. I love Ivanhoe, but it definitely had some slow bits, too. 6y
kathleenaflynn Ivanhoe is the only other Scott book I've read-- I found it ridiculous but amusingly so. Must confess that after posting the previous I bailed on Rob Roy and began reading Northanger Abbey! So much better! 6y
8 likes2 comments