And the Land Lay Still is the fourth novel by Scottish novelist and poet James Robertson. Upon publication in 2010 it was widely praised for its breadth of exploration of Scottish society in the latter half of the 20th century.
The novelâÂÂs narrative is shaped around the portfolio of the late photographer Angus Pendreich. His son Michael is involved in the establishment of a new exhibition of his renowned fatherâÂÂs work.
The book focuses on the characters presented in these photographs, which span post-war Scotland across geographies and social classes from the homeless to senior politicians. Their disparate stories present a collage that highlights the highs and lows of modern Scottish society.
The award-winning epic novel received near-unanimous critical acclaim in the mainstream British press.
For The Independent, the âÂÂdizzying grand opusâ was âÂÂeminently readableâ and successful in showcasing âÂÂan alternative history of the country told by its everyday people instead of its movers and shakersâÂÂ.
The Observer said that Robertson had âÂÂcaught something of the sheer bloody-minded craving for self-sabotage in the Scottish soul so accurately it's painfulâÂÂ. The Herald was impressed by âÂÂa state-of-the-nation novel with a Dickensian scopeâÂÂ.
The Daily Telegraph was impressed by the bookâÂÂs ability to meld âÂÂengrossing individual storylinesâ with âÂÂcultural shifts such as the birth of Scottish nationalism, the death of industry, the sexual revolution and the boom in North Sea oilâÂÂ. The New Statesman noted that four yearsâ worth of research had gone into the book and finished its review with the line: âÂÂItâÂÂs some achievementâÂÂ.
Writing in The Guardian, the writer Irvine Welsh said of the "highly ambitious" book that it âÂÂrepresents nothing less than a landmark for the novel in Scotland, and underlines the author's position as one of Britain's best contemporary novelistsâÂÂ. Scotland First Minister Alex Salmond selected the novel as his book of the year for 2010, telling the Scotland on Sunday that it was âÂÂoutstandingâÂÂ, âÂÂimportantâÂÂ, and the authorâÂÂs finest work.
The novel won the 2010 Scottish Book of the Year Award and was long-listed for the 2011 Creative Scotland Book of the Year Awards.