His Bloody Project
Dùsgadh His Bloody Project sa Chomraich. Cathy MacDonald explores the fact behind the fiction of Graeme Macrae Burnet's critically acclaimed novel His Bloody Project.
Tha Cathy Dhòmhnallach a' tadhal air a' Chomraich taobh siar Rois, far an do stèidhich Graeme MacRath Burnet an nobhail a choisinn cliù dha. Aig cridhe na sgeulachd dhorcha tha trì muirt bhrùideil, a rinn fireannach òg, Ruairidh MacRath, ann an 1869. Ann an ro-rà dh an leabhair, tha an t-ùghdar ag innse gu bheil eachdraidh na thachair ann an là mh-sgrìobhaidh a' mhurtair, clò-bhuailte na leabhar-san. Ann an clò airson a' chiad uair, le fìor bheag atharraichte aig an ùghdar, tha e a' leantail gach tachartas air an t-slighe gu na muirt. Ach 's e tha san leabhar aig MacRath Burnet ach ficsean ann am feall-chruth na fìrinne. A' leantail dòigh-sgrìobhaidh Gothic na naoitheamh linne deug, tha e a' cleachdadh gach cuilbheart sgrìobhaidh a bheir a chreidsinn air an leughadair gur e fìrinn a th' ann. Ach dè an fhìrinn a tha a' laighe air cùl feall-aithris na sgeòil? Tha Cathy Dhòmhnallach a' rannsachadh.
Cathy MacDonald visits Applecross in Wester Ross, the setting for Graeme Macrae Burnet's critically acclaimed novel. This dark tale centres on a brutal and bloody triple murder committed in 1869 by a young man named Roddy Macrae. In the preface to the novel, the author explains that printed within his book is the murderer's handwritten account.
Printed for the first time, and almost unchanged by the author, it details the events leading up to the murders. But Macrae Burnet's novel is a work of fiction, cleverly disguised as non-fiction. In true Gothic style, the author uses all the tricks of the novelist's trade to make the reader accept it as historically accurate. But just what is the fact behind the fiction in this deceptive tale? Cathy MacDonald investigates.
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Chan urrainn dha Roddy teicheadh
Duration: 01:21
Credit
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Cathy MacDonald |
Broadcasts
- Tue 19 Sep 2017 21:00
- Sun 24 Sep 2017 21:00
- Wed 27 Jun 2018 21:00
- Mon 2 Jul 2018 22:30
- Wed 20 Mar 2019 21:00
- Mon 25 Mar 2019 22:25
- Thu 30 Jan 2020 21:00
- Sun 2 Feb 2020 22:00
- Wed 5 May 2021 21:00
- Mon 10 May 2021 22:30
- Tue 15 Feb 2022 21:00
- Sun 20 Feb 2022 21:00