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Book Review: The Cone Gatherers

Cover of The Cone-Gatherers by Robin Jenkins
Buy The Cone-Gatherers

The Cone-Gatherers

by · ISBN: 9780857862358
★★★★★
Fiction Scottish Classic Literary Fiction War-Time Scotland Class & Prejudice

Overview

Set in a Scottish estate during the Second World War, The Cone-Gatherers follows brothers Calum and Neil, who have been sent to collect pine cones for the war effort. Calum is gentle, kind and physically disabled, while Neil is protective and watchful. Their presence unsettles the estate’s gamekeeper, Duror, whose growing obsession with Calum drives the novel towards tragedy. The story unfolds over only a few days, but the tensions it exposes run far deeper than that.

Writing & Voice

We found Jenkins’s writing remarkably controlled. The prose is simple on the surface, yet loaded with meaning. Every conversation and gesture seems to carry weight. He creates a sense of unease that grows steadily without ever needing dramatic flourishes or elaborate plotting.

Content & Perspective

The novel shifts between several perspectives, allowing us to see the estate from different angles. We understand Calum’s innocence, Neil’s concern, Lady Runcie-Campbell’s discomfort and, most importantly, Duror’s increasingly disturbed state of mind. This broader viewpoint turns a small story into something much larger and more unsettling.

Themes

The Cone-Gatherers explores prejudice, class division, cruelty and moral failure. It asks why people fear those who are different and how hatred can take root beneath a veneer of respectability. The wartime backdrop reinforces the novel’s central concern with humanity’s capacity for violence and exclusion.

What Worked

  • Exceptional character work that makes every viewpoint matter.
  • Powerful moral questions that remain relevant decades later.
  • Tense, controlled storytelling that builds towards a devastating conclusion.

Minor Quibbles

  • The measured pace may feel slow to some readers.
  • Its symbolism is subtle enough to reward rereading.

Final Thoughts

We finished this feeling that Jenkins had taken a small corner of Scotland and used it to expose something troubling and universal about human nature.

Rating: ★★★★★ / 5

We recommend this to readers who enjoy Scottish classics, literary fiction and novels that explore prejudice, class and morality with intelligence and restraint.