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  • Pictured: <br />
The author Val McDermid has said she will withdraw her support and sponsorship of Raith Rovers football club after it signed David Goodwillie.<br />
<br />
The striker was ruled to be a rapist and ordered to pay damages in a civil case in 2017.<br />
<br />
He never faced a criminal trial over the rape accusation after prosecutors said there was not enough evidence.<br />
<br />
Ms McDermid, known for her popular crime fiction novels, has been a lifelong fan of the Fife club.<br />
<br />
She was the Scottish Championship team's main shirt sponsor but said that deal would now be ended as a result of the signing.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm
    EEm_Val_McDermid_shuns_Raith_rovers_...jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016014.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016013.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016007.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016004.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016005.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016003.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016002.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016018.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016017.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016016.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016015.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016008.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016009.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription from Librarian Sarah Findlay<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016006.jpg
  • Pictured: Willie Rennie visited the surgery of Dr Book during his visit and picked up a reading prescription. He was worried that he was considered another heartless politician.<br />
<br />
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie  set out plans for a digital revolution in the way that children learn at schools during a visit to the Edinburgh Science Festival at Summerhall, Edinburgh, today <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 6 April 2016
    SCT_EEm_Willie_Rennie_GER06042016001.jpg
  • Edinburgh author Alexander McCall Smith is to receive a prestigious award from his home city.<br />
<br />
The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency writer has been named as the 2020 winner of the Edinburgh Award.<br />
<br />
The City of Edinburgh Council said it was in recognition of his writing success, legal career and academic work.
    EEm_McCall_Smith_Honoured_EdinburghG...JPG
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art in the Sculpture Court. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art in the Sculpture Court. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art in the Sculpture Court. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art in the Sculpture Court. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art in the Sculpture Court. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art in the Sculpture Court. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Edinburgh International Book Festival launch, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom 06 July 2021: <br />
Nick Barley, Director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, launches the 2021 programme for the August festival at its new home at the University of Edinburgh’s Edinburgh College of Art. Under the banner Onwards & Upwards: Ideas and Stories for a Changing World, the book festival will welcome authors live on stage with the first (albeit socially distanced) audiences since 2019.<br />
Sally Anderson | EdinburghElitemedia.co.uk
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_Launch_S...jpg
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...jpg
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...jpg
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kaite Welsh appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Kaite Welsh appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Kaite Welsh appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Kaite Welsh appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Kaite Welsh appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Caroline Lea appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Kenny MacAskill appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
January 1919, a world in turmoil: Ireland declared its independence, while Trotsky led the Red Army in Poland. Maybe that’s why workers’ demonstrations in Glasgow led the British establishment to roll army tanks into George Square. Kenny MacAskill’s new book Glasgow 1919 offers coruscating new perspectives on the major players and events in a key period in Scotland’s political history.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Kenny_MacAskill_at_the_Edinburgh...jpg
  • Caroline Lea appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Caroline Lea appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Caroline Lea appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Caroline Lea appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Mary Paulson-Ellis appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Mary Paulson-Ellis follows up her 2017 Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year with The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing, a historical mystery that sees a modern-day heir hunter in Scotland seeking the owner of a dead man’s fortune. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...jpg
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Michelle Paver appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
While horror fans lap up blood and gore, the subtlety of a well-told ghost story can chill a reader to the bones. House of Glass, by Whitbread First Novel Award-winning Susan Fletcher, features love, lies and ghosts as Britain enters the First World War. Michelle Paver’s Wakenhyrst is a gothic thriller where unspeakable forces are unleashed. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Susan Fletcher appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
While horror fans lap up blood and gore, the subtlety of a well-told ghost story can chill a reader to the bones. House of Glass, by Whitbread First Novel Award-winning Susan Fletcher, features love, lies and ghosts as Britain enters the First World War. Michelle Paver’s Wakenhyrst is a gothic thriller where unspeakable forces are unleashed. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...jpg
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...JPG
  • Arundhati Roy & Nicola Sturgeon appear at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Acclaimed author Arundhati Roy talks to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon about the Indian author’s life, work and growing up with prejudice and struggle.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Nicola_Sturgeon_at_the_Edinburgh...jpg
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Victoria Hislop appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Victoria Hislop’s Those Who Are Loved is another sure-fire bestseller set amid tumultuous Mediterranean history. Themis survives the Nazi occupation of Greece only to become embroiled in the ensuing civil war. Her communist connections land her in a prison where she’s forced to give birth. Sensitive and insightful about women’s experience of the trauma of war, Hislop shows she's at the top of her game.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Michelle Paver appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
While horror fans lap up blood and gore, the subtlety of a well-told ghost story can chill a reader to the bones. House of Glass, by Whitbread First Novel Award-winning Susan Fletcher, features love, lies and ghosts as Britain enters the First World War. Michelle Paver’s Wakenhyrst is a gothic thriller where unspeakable forces are unleashed. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Michelle Paver appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
While horror fans lap up blood and gore, the subtlety of a well-told ghost story can chill a reader to the bones. House of Glass, by Whitbread First Novel Award-winning Susan Fletcher, features love, lies and ghosts as Britain enters the First World War. Michelle Paver’s Wakenhyrst is a gothic thriller where unspeakable forces are unleashed. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Susan Fletcher appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
While horror fans lap up blood and gore, the subtlety of a well-told ghost story can chill a reader to the bones. House of Glass, by Whitbread First Novel Award-winning Susan Fletcher, features love, lies and ghosts as Britain enters the First World War. Michelle Paver’s Wakenhyrst is a gothic thriller where unspeakable forces are unleashed. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Susan Fletcher appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
While horror fans lap up blood and gore, the subtlety of a well-told ghost story can chill a reader to the bones. House of Glass, by Whitbread First Novel Award-winning Susan Fletcher, features love, lies and ghosts as Britain enters the First World War. Michelle Paver’s Wakenhyrst is a gothic thriller where unspeakable forces are unleashed. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Erika Fatland appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
The collapse of the Soviet Union brought about new states across eastern Europe and central Asia, often routinely ignored by the West. Norwegian writer and social anthropologist Erika Fatland journeyed across the five ‘Stans’ which once made up the Soviet border, encountering conflicts between history and future, exhausted human rights activists and falling dictators. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Caroline Lea appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival.<br />
<br />
Period thrillers don’t get better than these two new British novels by Caroline Lea and Kaite Welsh. In Lea’s stellar The Glass Woman, a windswept 17th century Icelandic village is plunged into paranoia with the arrival of a newly married couple. Welsh’s popular Victorian Edinburgh medical mystery series continues in The Unquiet Heart, as Sarah Gilchrist finds herself defending her dull fiancé against murder charges. <br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_DJ_19082...JPG
  • Edinburgh Book Festival, Wednesday 15th August 2018<br />
<br />
Pictured: Author Dag Solstad<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Edinburgh_Book_Festival_AT_15082...JPG
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