From the Foreword by Professor Tom Devine: Arnold Kemp one of the greatest of Scottish journalists & editors of the 20th century died prematurely at the age of 63 in 2002. He edited The Herald with memorable elan & panache between 1981 & 1994 & his prolific writings also regularly graced the pages of the Scotsman the Guardian & the Observer in a career which spanned more than four decades from the year he began his first job in journalism in 1959 as a sub-editor on the Scotsman fresh out of Edinburgh University. Kemp left behind him a rich personal but un-catalogued archive of newspaper articles chapters in books & opinion pieces. These have now been expertly harvested & selected by his daughter Jackie. Reading them it is clear that her father was a master of his trade & that his published work provides a perceptive & illuminating guide to the key historical events of his lifetime in Scotl&. This book encompasses the arly rise of nationalism the traumatic de-industrialisation & then transformation of the economy in the 1980s the impact of the Thatcher governments on Scotland the halting progress toward devolution & then the successful establishment of the Scottish Parliament in the last decade of the century. These events & others are all recorded here not in the arid descriptive prose of the chronicler but with the eloquence punch & insight for which Kemp was noted. As a result the recent Scottish past is brought alive in an engaging & highly readable fashion. The immediacy of the reportage the sense of a writer who because of his journalistic & editorial eminence knew all the principal actors involved & was close to the unfolding of great events are all plainly evident to the reader. But Kemp also scorns mediocrity incompetence humbug & hypocrisy in the political & cultural life of the nation & several of the excerpts are also fair & balanced judgements perhaps most notably in the evaluation of the impact of Margaret Thatcher on Scotl&. There is a liveliness & breadth in the writing redolent of Kemps own personal wide international horizons his travels in America & Europe love of conviviality & the craic. The passion for life shines through. This is an important text for anyone wishing to come to a fuller understanding of how Scotland developed from the dark days of the Second World War to the current debates over independence. It is also a hugely enjoyable read which many will savour with interest & delight for its own sake.