Book description
 Far Inland is a shamanic story for our times. If story tells us
of our past and vision speaks to the future, Peter Urpeth has combined
both in this delightful work' Â- Alastair McIntosh, author of Hell and
High Water and fellow of the Centre for Human Ecology  The lonely
terror of psychic disintegration and explosions of renewal are vividly
and brilliantly conveyed here . . . full of authentic evocation' Â-
Tom Lowenstein, author of Ancient Land, Sacred Whale (Bloomsbury)
Raised in the Outer Hebrides, Sorley MacRath loved the moorlands and
the brilliant night skies he knew as a child, but he knew as well the
destructive power of the gift of 'second sight'. As a young man he
turned his back on the island life for life in Glasgow where,
ultimately, he runs an antiquarian bookshop. But events soon prove to
him that his inherited powers are far greater than he knew. A violent
assault leaves him in a coma and triggers his initiation as a shaman
through startling encounters with his ancestors, only for him to wake
into a sceptical world with no place for his archaic powers, and he
too is uncertain of their truth and unskilled in their application.
Haunted by memories and loss, he returns to his island home determined
to prove the truth in his powers and his worth. There, living in the
long-empty family croft house, he is drawn back to the wild beauty of
the moorlands and the Gaelic culture of his childhood. Set on the Isle
of Lewis and in Glasgow, Far Inland draws on Gaelic and Inuit
mythology and spirituality to inform a contemporary tale that is
profoundly original, elegiac and redemptive.
Peter Urpeth studied literature and philosophy at Middlesex
Polytechnic. He worked as a music journalist for Time Out and is a
former editor of the Stornoway Gazette. He is HI-Arts' writing
development coordinator and lives on Lewis. This is his first novel.