Ken Lussey
@kenlussey.bsky.social
380 followers 520 following 170 posts
Author, photographer, traveller, husband, father, grandfather and lover of Scotland and all things Scottish. Website: https://www.kenlussey.com/
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Reposted by Ken Lussey
librariesnl.bsky.social
Let the good times roll! Looking for a fun way to spend an afternoon? Our Adult Board Game Café at #CoatbridgeLib offers a warm and friendly environment to learn a new game or play an old favourite. All welcome – just come along at 12pm on Saturday 11 October.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
thisismyglasgow.bsky.social
Glasgow pubs can look very inviting on wet and windy nights like tonight. This particular one is the he Islay Inn on the corner of Argyle Street and Radnor Street in the West End of the city.

#glasgow #glasgowpubs #islayinn #argylestreet #architecture #nightphotography #glasgowatnight
kenlussey.bsky.social
A city at peace in a world at war. ‘The Stockholm Run’ is a fast-paced thriller set in Scotland and Sweden during World War Two. A secret buried beneath Edinburgh Castle is central to the story.
Available as a paperback, Kindle, Kobo or Apple. Find out more: www.kenlussey.com/tsr/index.html
The image shows the east end of Edinburgh Castle rising into a clear blue sky, seen from below. There are steep slopes in the bottom right of the image and sheer rocks in the bottom right, with the castle built on top of both. The front cover of 'The Stockholm Run' is shown in the bottom left corner.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
thisismyglasgow.bsky.social
Love this dragon-like creature on a drainpipe on the Gothic style former Hutchesontown Free Church on Dixon Avenue on the Southside of Glasgow. Designed by John Bennie Wilson, it was built in the 1890s.

#glasgow #architecture #glasgowbuildings #sculpture #dragon #church #architecturephotography
Reposted by Ken Lussey
alexchurchill.bsky.social
Today’s feature is up on Substack. I’ve been obsessing over my Tank Memorial Book again, but this time I’ve put all of the citations in context. You get tanks, Canadians, and a bad few days for the German Army in 1918… achurchill.substack.com/p/full-featu...
Reposted by Ken Lussey
classicalalan.bsky.social
The Roman camp of Raedykes near Stonehaven is one of the best preserved in Scotland. It covers around 38 hectares and has an irregular outline. Probably built in the late 1st century, by the 1700s it was being associated with the elusive site of the battle of Mons Graupius. #RomanSiteSaturday
The ditch of the Roman camp of Raedykes in north east Scotland
Reposted by Ken Lussey
scotchurchestrust.bsky.social
Day 3 of #31DaysOfGraves - Tomb

Here's the magnificent late 16th century tomb of Sir Thomas MacLellan and his wife Dame Grissell Maxwell in Greyfriars Episcopal Church, Kirkcudbright. Note the burgh motto: "Think on"

Read more about church here 👇
www.scotlandschurchestrust.org.uk/church/greyf...
Reposted by Ken Lussey
arachnidpress.bsky.social
One broch, two millennia, three murders. ‘Thicker Than Water’ is a compelling murder mystery set in northern Scotland. The fictional Sarclet Castle south of Wick has a central part to play in the story.
Available as a Kindle, Kobo or Apple. Find out more:
www.arachnid.scot/book-ttw/ind...
The image shows the fictional Sarclet Castle, partly based on the real Castle of Mey. The image shows a lawn in the foreground with a drive sweeping round it. Beyond is the front face of a castle made of honey-coloured stone. It has a five-storey tower on the right with a four-storey range to the left of it with a grey slate roof and a two-storey extension on the left, plus a grand entrance in the middle. The sky is blue and the scene is in sunlight. The front cover of ‘Thicker Than Water’ is shown in the top left corner.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
jshphotog.bsky.social
#Glasgow by Raymond Depardon - PREVIOUSLY UNSEEN photos from 1980, by the #Magnum #photographer who brought out widely discussed book of Glasgow photos in 2016. www.magnumphotos.com/arts-culture...
A World in Color: Across the United Kingdom | Magnum Photos Magnum Photos
www.magnumphotos.com
Reposted by Ken Lussey
Reposted by Ken Lussey
classicalalan.bsky.social
Excavated in 1905 at the Roman fort of Trimontium @trimontiumtrust.bsky.social near Melrose, this bronze helmet features images of winged Victory and also Cupid driving a chariot drawn by horses. It can now be seen @ntlmuseumsscot.bsky.social.
#FindsFriday
A gold coloured Bronze Roman helmet featuring relief images of a winged cupid
A Roman bronze helmet viewed from behind with decorated images including a winged cupid.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
orkneylibrary.bsky.social
If you go down to Stromness Library today, you can see Stephanie's superbly spooktacular window painting of Meg and Mog, from the brilliant books by Helen Nicoll and Jan Pieńkowski. 🧙‍♀️🐈‍⬛🦉🧹🌙

#LoveLibraries #Halloween
A photo of a window painting of Meg and Mog. A witch on a broomstick, a cat, an owl and a moon and stars
Photos of a window painting of Meg and Mog. A witch on a broomstick, a cat, an owl and a moon
kenlussey.bsky.social
‘Friend or Foe?’ is a fast-paced new thriller set largely in south-west Scotland during World War Two. The hunt for a spy leads the book’s central characters to Lochryan House in Cairnryan.
Available as a paperback, Kindle, Kobo or Apple. Find out more:
www.kenlussey.com/fof/index.html
This modern image shows Lochryan House in Cairnryan. A pair of gateposts topped off by stone balls dominate the centre of the frame, with lower walls either side of them. Between the gateposts, a drive leads from the foot of the frame into its centre, where part of a three-storey white mansion can be seen, topped off by crenellations. There are trees and bushes either side of the drive and beyond the mansion a wooded hillside leads out of the top of the frame. The scene is in sunlight. The front cover of ‘Friend or Foe?’ is shown in the bottom right corner.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
Reposted by Ken Lussey
wolct.bsky.social
A lovely morning with the Edinburgh office of Historic Enviornent Scotland down at Stockbridge.

Teams were out sweeping the river for rubbish, tending the walkway and creating memories by the river.

Thanks for the help folks.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
orkneylibrary.bsky.social
s of the night.

#NationalPoetryDay #BookSpinePoetry
A stack of books. Their spines read Tiger Tiger Burning Bright, In the Forest
Reposted by Ken Lussey
hookland.bsky.social
A tomb adorned with cymbal bashing apes may not be to everyone's taste, but even in death, it seems many of us retain our peculiarities. I heartily approve of such afterlife eccentricity. – Lucy Hay, architectural historian, 'Grave Concerns', BBC Two, 1980
Reposted by Ken Lussey
claredocherty1.bsky.social
😲 I saw a amazing Bookshop/Library online in china, it's out of this world. 📚
#BookSky #Library #BookShop #China
Reposted by Ken Lussey
arachnidpress.bsky.social
How many deaths to end a war? ‘Eyes Turned Skywards’ is a fast-paced thriller set mainly in northern Scotland during World War Two. This is the air crash memorial at Eagle’s Rock in Caithness.
Available as a Kindle, Kobo or Apple. Find out more:
www.arachnid.scot/book-ets/ind...
The image shows a plain white stone Celtic cross standing on top of a large plinth that narrows from bottom to top. We are looking at a corner of the cross with the light coming from the right and inscriptions in black can be seen on the two visible faces of the plinth. The landscape is bare and covered in brown heather and bracken. The scene is in bright sunlight. The front cover of ‘Eyes Turned Skywards’ is shown in the top right corner.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
yvbsg.bsky.social
#WindowsOnWednesday Some workroom windows, including dairies and cheese rooms, were exempt from window tax if clearly labelled as such.
Dairy window in Hurstwood, Lancashire. Dairy window in Old Chamber, West Yorkshire. Dairy window in Cropton, North Yorkshire. Dairy window in Eastwood, West Yorkshire.
Reposted by Ken Lussey
scotchurchestrust.bsky.social
It's time once again to celebrate the artistry and heritage of our historic graveyards with the #31DaysOfGraves initiative, curated by @annaandthedead.bsky.social

Today's theme is "Flower" so here are two wonderful 18thC stones from Currie Kirk in Edinburgh with some daisies carved on them. (1/2)
Reposted by Ken Lussey
romanscotland.bsky.social
Having meetings in Edinburgh and being watched over by these guys
Reposted by Ken Lussey
lostglasgow.bsky.social
Hunting for the Hunterian...

As a museum lover, I wish I could have visited this beauty. Built in 1805, to house the collection of the great surgeon, William Hunter, the building only stood for 80 years before the Uni sold their High Street home for the creation of a railway yard.