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Borrowed Land A Highland Story

Nature Writing New
By: Kapka Kassabova(Author)
332 pages, no illustrations
Publisher: Jonathan Cape
Borrowed Land
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  • Borrowed Land ISBN: 9781787335349 Hardback Apr 2026 In stock
    £22.00
    #269379 | Stock: 1
Price: £22.00
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

From the powerful rivers that bring life and prosperity; to the Pictish cairns, undisturbed for centuries; to the meadows of bluebells, where deer emerge, God-like, in a flash, Kapka Kassabova reveals a world that has been abused, but remains achingly beautiful and alive.

In the Highlands, centuries-old connections between the land, nature and people have been, and continue to be, shaken by the forces of colonialism, industry, depopulation, and private property speculation. Borrowed Land tells the stories of those who are working against this disconnect: the last true Highlanders fighting to preserve their home.

An extraordinary portrait of the Scottish Highlands, this is an epic and urgent story of destruction and renewal, told through encounters with some of the last true Highlanders.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Kapka Kassabova is a prize-winning writer of non-fiction and poetry. Her recent Balkan quartet includes Anima (2024), Elixir (2023), To the Lake (2020) and Border (2017). Border won a British Academy Prize, the Scottish Book of the Year, Stanford-Dolman Travel Book of the Year, the Highland Book Prize and the Prix Nicholas Bouvier. It was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. The French edition of To the Lake won the Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger (non-fiction). Kassabova grew up in Sofia, Bulgaria, and studied in New Zealand. Today, she lives by a river in the Scottish Highlands.

Nature Writing New
By: Kapka Kassabova(Author)
332 pages, no illustrations
Publisher: Jonathan Cape
Media reviews

"Brave, intense, unexpected, lyrical and troubling"
– Rory Stewart

"Combines the detail and intimacy of boots on the ground reportage with the universality of a dark fable. This is a Highland story, but also a global story – a poetic and haunting anatomy of what happens when a world is addicted to extraction."
– James Crawford

"To read Borrowed Land by Kapka Kassabova is to understand what it means to slip one’s skin and become a river, a forest or a mountain [...] This mesmeric and intimate testimony becomes a defiant dreamlike thrum of resistance to corporate greed [...] Brilliant, daring and urgent"
– Sally Huband

"This is a hugely important, and timely, book. It has filled me with anger and despair, as well as a good deal of hope"
– Angus Peter Campbell

"Essential and revelatory reading. It's full of quiet rage on behalf of the old land – and the health and dignity of the humans that live there – being destroyed by industrial capitalism. It's a wake-up call that exposes the great lie of a profit-driven corporate decarbonisation. Kapka's writing is ferocious and instinctive, and my copy is full of underlined passages and folded corners, so much is there to treasure."
– Kerry Andrew

"Kassabova reveals both the tragic beauty of the Highlands and the greedy madness of the way the energy transition is unfolding in stark and moving prose. A hymn, a howl and a call to action all at once."
– Ben Rawlence

"I couldn't quite understand how something which chronicles such terrible destruction could be quite so uplifting. It is because Kassabova has hit on some fire at the centre of life. Love is attention, and here is the most beautiful portrayal and expression of love"
– Horatio Clare

"A devastating account of change in one part of the Scottish Highlands – the death of valleys and their people, the death of forests and rivers and how extraction and energy generation has ripped through this place. Such powerful writing, such anguish and love. Kapka Kassabova has written another brilliant book."
– Philip Marsden

"An important and deeply tragic account of yet another phase in the long history of the exploitation of the Highlands and the complete powerlessness of the actual inhabitants, this time in the name of renewable energy, a disturbing paradox"
– Madeleine Bunting

"Culloden, in 1746, ended the old life of the Highlands. But Kassabova brilliantly shows, in this fierce, tender, plangent and compellingly readable book, that Culloden itself continues: that there are new and more sinister invaders, and that the clans must rally once more."
– Charles Foster, author of The Edges of the World

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