The 10 novels on this list have it all: suspense, drama, comedy, and, especially, great scenery. Set in lands beautiful, powerful, and ancient and in cities brooding and struggling for modern identity, the books presented here leave readers walking away as though they have just returned from a fascinating world, sometimes breathtaking in beauty, other times veiled in clouds and mystery. Each book on this list has become a part of the literature of the place it features. Each is also contemporary (the oldest work on the list was published in 1985), revealing the perspectives and talent of the region’s modern writers. The novels listed here, however, represent only a small fraction of the many great recent works featuring characters and places in the British Isles. They are by no means the only ones.
44 Scotland Street
The first selection on this list, British writer Alexander McCall Smith’s 44 Scotland Street (2005)—the first book in a series of the same name—takes readers to a bustling bohemian street in Edinburgh’s New Town, specifically to building No. 44. There we are introduced to an eccentric widow, a self-preening-obsessed surveyor, and a mother determined to have her five-year-old son master the saxophone and the Italian language. Charming, humorous, and relevant, 44 Scotland Street portrays everyday life in New Town as it exists today, complete with cameos of popular real-life Edinburgh figures, among them Ian Rankin and Malcolm Rifkind.
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children