Book description
Rob Roy MacGregor's name and reputation stride through late-17th-
and early 18th-century Scottish history and he is probably the
nation's best-known historical figure next to Robert the Bruce,
William Wallace and Bonnie Prince Charlie. Along with those three, Rob
Roy's portrayal in book and film has created a figure that does not
really tally with the man that Nigel Tranter believes was much more
than a mere Trossachs-based cattle thief, blackmailer, outlaw and
protection racketeer. That he stole cattle, forced lairds to pay money
to ensure their cattle were safe and lived on the wrong side of the
law is not in dispute, but there are two sides to every story, and
Rob's is one of the most fascinating in Scottish history. In this
comprehensible portrait of Rob Roy, master storyteller Nigel Tranter
reveals a strange man who always had to stay one step ahead of
everyone around him, be it in the business of cattle, his financial
and political dealings with the dukes of Montrose and Argyll, his
endeavours in support of the Jacobite cause, or his continual struggle
with Montrose's factor, Graham of Killearn.
When he failed to manage this complex set of activities, the
repercussions were dire, not only for himself and his clan, but most
importantly for his relationship with his remarkable wife, Mary. That
he managed to survive in the political cauldron that was Jacobite
Scotland, reconcile himself with his wife, maintain his nephew's clan
lands and somehow survive into relative old age to die in peace in his
bed is wholly remarkable.
This is Rob Roy's story, warts and all.
Nigel Tranter was one of Scotland's most prolific author with over
100 titles written. He specialised in Scottish historical fiction.