Bonnie Prince Charlie's escape after Culloden gets dirty road trip treatment in the hands of novelist Alan Warner

If any romance surrounding Bonnie Prince Charlie’s attempt to secure the British throne for his family line is still alive, it has surely died in Alan Warner’s latest novel, which reimagines the five months he spent on the run following his defeat at Culloden.

In Nothing Left to Fear From Hell, Warner tracks the Prince and his “wandering banditti” through deep Highland territory, moving often by night, sometimes on shoeless feet and usually weighed down by the waterlogged and a foul sort of hunger. While safe shelter was scarce, the bounty on their heads followed them everywhere.

It’s a journey to the islands, which ultimately ends in the Prince’s final exit to France from Loch nan Uamh near Arisaig, that takes on a “road trip” feel, says Warner. The author pushes a dirty realist tone into the often heroic narrative of the Prince’s escape. Vomit, diarrhoea, midge clouds, sex talk and pale, bare backsides help set the scene for this “rash adventure” of most wanted men.

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Warner said: “I didn’t want to go in all provocative, smashing the mythology apart. But at the same time if you are wanting to write about this period, and any period, you are writing out of the period. You are going into the period and asking that difficult question of ‘what was it really like?’

Bonnie Prince Charlie meets Flora MacDonald: his time on the run after Culloden has now been reimagined by novelist Alan Warner in his new book Nothing Left to Fear From Hell.Bonnie Prince Charlie meets Flora MacDonald: his time on the run after Culloden has now been reimagined by novelist Alan Warner in his new book Nothing Left to Fear From Hell.
Bonnie Prince Charlie meets Flora MacDonald: his time on the run after Culloden has now been reimagined by novelist Alan Warner in his new book Nothing Left to Fear From Hell.

“You are trying to get characters moving through this world. Having that dirty realist approach gave me a way into it.”

Warner, whose works include Morvern Callar and The Sopranos, described writing about Bonnie Prince Charlie as a “powerful, even overwhelming experience”. Of the landscapes where events of the ‘45 played out, he has “intimate knowledge”.

Warner has been interested in the period since the lessons of Donald Clark, head of history at Oban High School in the 1970s, who fired “passion and interest” into the topic and prompted much teenage reading about the Highland Clearances and the failed Jacobite risings.

Of Bonnie Prince Charlie, he found not just a “chancer who brought havoc”, but also the scope of a man powered by a higher belief that it is not battles or rebellions which make kings, but God. Ambition, intelligence and toughness are portrayed.