A warm, intimate portrait of Aberdeen’s people and everyday life.
This nonfiction collection gathers personal reminiscences from a lifelong Aberdonian, offering vivid sketches of city life, its clergy, crafts, and common folk through the author’s eyes.
This edition presents a series of short, connected memories that trace the social fabric of Aberdeen from the mid‑19th century onward. It blends humor with affection, showing how ordinary moments—from church sermons to street scenes and small-town rituals—shaped a local identity and its lasting traditions.
- Delights and disappointments of everyday life in Aberdeen, seen through family stories and neighborhood tales
- Anecdotes about memorable local figures, including ministers, musicians, and the city’s colorful characters
- Reflections on community bonds, work, and the rhythms of 19th‑century Scottish life
- A sense of place that invites readers to imagine life in a long‑gone era of Bon‑Accord
Ideal for readers of local histories, memoirs, and those curious about the social texture of Victorian and post‑Victorian Aberdeen.