The Testament of Gideon Mack
Overview
The Testament of Gideon Mack is presented as the recovered manuscript of a Scottish minister who disappears after falling into a ravine. Gideon Mack claims he met the Devil and the novel unfolds through his account, alongside commentary that questions his reliability, his faith and his understanding of what truly happened.
Writing & Voice
We found Robertson’s voice measured, thoughtful and quietly compelling. The framing device is handled with care, allowing doubt to sit alongside belief. The prose is calm and reflective, mirroring Gideon’s restrained personality while gradually revealing deeper conflict and uncertainty.
Content & Perspective
The novel moves between Gideon’s testimony and the responses of those who knew him. As his childhood, ministry and loss of faith come into view, we are asked to judge whether his encounter is supernatural, psychological or something that resists clear explanation.
Themes
The Testament of Gideon Mack explores belief, doubt, inheritance and the limits of rational explanation. It looks closely at Scottish Presbyterian culture, moral responsibility and the human need for meaning, even when faith appears absent or exhausted.
What Worked
- A convincing narrative structure that sustains ambiguity.
- A strong sense of place rooted in contemporary Scotland.
- A thoughtful engagement with faith and scepticism.
Minor Quibbles
- The pace is deliberately slow.
- Some readers may want firmer answers.
Final Thoughts
Measured, thoughtful, and quietly unsettling, The Testament of Gideon Mack wrestles with faith and doubt, trusting ambiguity to linger long after certainty would have been easier.
Rating: ★★★★½ / 5

