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A Lodge in the Wilderness

A Lodge in the Wilderness
Author John Buchan
Language English
Genre Quasi-novel
Publisher William Blackwood & Sons
Publication date
1906
Media type Print

A Lodge in the Wilderness is a 1906 political quasi-novel by the Scottish author John Buchan.

The book relates an imagined conference arranged by a multi-millionaire, Francis Carey, to discuss Empire. The guests are contemporary figures from the upper and professional classes, nine men and nine women who have in common superb articulateness, wide experience, and an interest in understanding how Empire might be a positive influence. Buchan uses the opportunity to set out a variety of views on political and social issues, and to play Devil’s Advocate.

David Daniell, in The Interpreter's House (1975), calls the work "an extraordinary book, like nothing else." It is mostly serious discussion, but there is also a lot of fun especially in the portrait of Lady Flora Brume, based upon the real-life Susan Grosvenor who was later to become Buchan's wife.

Writing for The John Buchan Society website in 2002, Edwin Lee notes that while the book has some aspects of a novel it is not a novel in the ordinary sense of the word. Rather, he suggests, Buchan is using the imagined conference, via the utterances of his characters, as a means of defending the ideals and practical benefits of Empire.

Andrew Lownie, in his 2013 biography John Buchan: The Presbyterian Cavalier, suggests that while the attitudes appearing in the book may appear patronising to a late 20th-century reader, Buchan “shows himself to be far in advance of many of his contemporaries with his view of the empowerment of the individual and the Empire as a liberalising force for good”.


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