North Sea Heroes - by Mike Shepherd. Reviewed by Duncan Harley
I think it
was Robert Graves who once said that if you live by the pen, you can live
almost anywhere. Graves of course came from a privileged background. He ended
up in Majorca and famously said that if you take up that pen, you’d better have
something to say.
Well, Graves had probably never visited Cruden Bay. And why would he. It’s a
tiny settlement in Aberdeenshire formerly known as Port Errol. Dracula author
Bram Stoker spent his holidays in the village and, if we are to believe the modern-day
histories, a golf hotel on the dunes hosted the likes of Winston Churchill and
mustard tycoon Jeremiah Colman. Even William Burrell put in an appearance
at Cruden Bay and if you look up the history on the likes of Wikipedia, you’ll
likely find that the place can boast a few dozen more celebrities to its name. Enter
Mike Shepherd. He lives in Cruden Bay and he writes books.
I have to confess an interest here. Mike and I have a history. We both pen
books about Scotland. Mike has penned at least six and I am rapidly catching
up. Not that there is a rivalry here. More like a recognition that once you
embark on that writing trail, there is no giving up. Its like a drug. An
addiction. And his latest book ‘North Sea Heroes’ is a cracker! So, no
surprises there.
Unlike Mike’s previous books, the narrative is presented as a work of historical
fiction. But nothing is made up. The seven tales which comprise this book are
sourced from historical records and although it takes a few pages to understand
the flow of the writing, once you’re in the zone the narrative takes over and
the journey through history begins in earnest.
First up is the chasing of the ships of the Spanish Armada up to the Firth of
Forth and then around the storm-tossed coastline of Scotland. Virtually every
stately home along the coast of Scotland boasts a cannon or two salvaged from
the wrecked galleons and some of the claims might even be true. Haddo House has
one and I recall seeing one at Tobermory many years ago. North Sea Heroes
explores the timeline of the Spanish disaster and variously challenges and supports the myths through
the medium of diaries of the folk who were witness to the events of 1588.
Second up is the tale of Sir George Bruce. I’d never heard of the man to be
honest. But in 1575, he became a big mover in the coalmining business.
Seemingly he funded the driving of a coal mine underneath the Firth of Forth
and made a name for himself by resurrecting the Culross coal industry. The stories pound on and on. There are seven in total.
A favourite of mine is the tale of Tryggve Gran. Now, I’d researched him for
one of my books. He has links to Norwegian fascism and is famed for having made
the first successful flight over the North Sea in a Bleriot monoplane. I vaguely
knew about his links to the disastrous Terra Nova Antarctic expedition of 1910.
But here, in narrative form is Tryggve’s first hand take on the episode.
All in all, this new book is a worthy addition to my bookshelf. Mike Shepherd
has penned yet another a book full of splendid yarns adorned with bucketloads
of well researched historical detail.
Published by
Wild Wolf Publishing, North Sea Heroes by Mike Shepherd is available from
Amazon at £12.99
ISBN-13: 978-1907954825
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