The Leper's Bell: The Autobiography of a Changeling

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Birlinn, May 1, 2011 - Biography & Autobiography - 352 pages

A comedian, singer, composer, musician, linguist, actor, author and a favourite of Sean Connery and Billy Connolly's, Norman MacLean is a living legend in the Gaelic world and a household name across the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. Yet for all his creative genius Norman MacLean is virtually anonymous outside this ribbon of northern Scotland. His career has been etched with enormous highs and lows - a reflection of the turmoil of his private life, where a lifelong battle with alcohol has had a crippling effect on everything that he has touched, and which has arguably prevented him from achieving the global recognition that his undoubted talent so merited.

In The Leper's Bell, an erudite, analytical and frank autobiography of this wonderful, unique, but ultimately little-known star, Norman MacLean reveals the man behind the comedy and the crippling horrors of alcoholism. It is in turns tragic and uplifting, devastating and hilarious, elegant and heartbreaking, and one of the most compelling and moving memoirs to appear in recent years.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Title Page Dedication Epigraph Acknowledgements
Authors Note
Prologue
Srathan 2 Benbecula
Tenements
Pursuit of Excellence
Summer Holidays
Saved by the Bell
Heavy Sigh Sad Heart
Avalanche
Farewell Ella
Stag in the Mist
14
Playing with Fire
Florida Interlude
Heartbreaker

Via Veritas Vita
Laissez le Bons Temps Rouler 9 Via Dolorosa

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About the author (2011)

Born in Glasgow in 1936, Norman Maclean was educated at school and university in Glasgow, before going on to teach all over Scotland. He garnered much fame after winning two Gold Medals at the National Mod - for poetry and singing - in the same year, 1967, the only person ever to do so. Shortly afterwards he began a career, as he would say himself, as a clown, and it is in that role, and that of a musician, that he is still best-known today.

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