Alec Forbes of Howglen is a novel by George MacDonald, first published in 1865, and is primarily concerned with Scottish country life.
The 'Howglen' described in the novel is probably a reference to George MacDonald's childhood home in Huntly, Scotland, 'The Farm.' The 'Glamour' river, on which the town of the novel is situated, has been immortalized in the names of modern-day streets in Huntly, as well as a children's park near the site of the old MacDonald family Mill.
Much of the original novel is written in the Doric, a dialect of North East Scotland. A subsequent edition "translates into readable English the heaviest portions of the Scots dialect in which most of MacDonald’s Scottish stories are written." [1]
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