Prisoners of Conscience
About This Book
A Shetland fisherman of proud lineage wrestles with inherited pagan impulses and devout Christianity while a neighboring death provokes bitter accusations that cloud his courtship and marriage; family grudges, local gossip, and a relentless legal judgment force him into moral silence and isolation. The narrative then follows another Borson, David, as he seeks a new life amid kinship ties, community suspicion, and the repercussions of the earlier sentence. Through intertwined episodes of trial, sacrifice, and inward struggle, the book examines conscience, culpability, the collision of ancestral loyalties with Christian ethics, and the costs of proving or living under a contested verdict.
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