Acclaimed novelist, journalist and long-serving Scotsman critic passed away peacefully at his home in the Borders surrounded by family.
Renowned Scottish novelist, journalist and literary critic Allan Massie has died aged 87, his family have confirmed.
The prolific writer, who authored 40 books during his career, passed away peacefully at his home in Selkirk in the Scottish Borders on Tuesday afternoon, surrounded by his children.
Massie was best known for his historical novels about Roman emperors Augustus and Caesar, as well as acclaimed wartime fiction including; A Question of Loyalties, The Sins of the Father and Shadows of Empire.
Alongside his fiction, he enjoyed a distinguished career in journalism, spending 50 years as chief literary critic at The Scotsman. He stepped back from the role in January after being diagnosed with serious illness.
His son, writer Alex Massie, said his father had “a good and gentle end to a good and gentle life,” adding that their family home was always filled with books and newspapers, and that Massie worked daily at his typewriter for most of his life.
Paying tribute on Substack, Alex said: “He was a good and kind man and there are many younger writers and others for whom he has been a source of encouragement and much else besides. He was also a great father. We shall miss him greatly.”
Born in Singapore in 1938 and raised in Aberdeenshire, Massie studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, before settling in the Scottish Borders, where he lived for more than 40 years.
He wrote for numerous publications including The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Times, The Glasgow Herald, The Spectator and the Scottish Daily Mail, covering topics ranging from literature and politics to rugby.
In addition to his novels, he published biographies, books on Scottish history and culture, and studies of writers such as Muriel Spark and Eric Linklater. Massie continued writing until earlier this year, when he revealed he was battling what he described as his “wretched cancer”.
