This collection of the best of Iain Crichton Smith's short fictionbrings together not one but m...
The house was extraordinarily peaceful as if by an act of will I had banished all the fertile gho...
When the breathing got worse he went into the adjacent room and got the copy of Dante. All that n...
Iain Crichton Smith's Collected Poems was awarded the Saltire Prize when it was published in 1992...
'Iain Crichton Smith writes like a poet, with strong natural rhythm and precise observation' - Th...
Ralph Simmons, a writer, struggles to survive a nervous breakdown that leaves him anxious, suspic...
The world, in Iain Crichton Smith's vision is a field full of folk; and one Scottish village is i...
The titular Mr Dixon is not the novel's main character but the creation of the novel's main chara...
Tom and Vera Mallow, who are in only their early thirties, might indeed be said to be in the autu...
Iain Crichton Smith's third novel is as different from his second, The Last Summer, as that was f...
The tenement has its being, its almost independent being, in a small Scottish town. Built of grey...
Retrained, finely wrought ... Mr Crichton Smith shows us isolation, perplexity, loneliness, a com...