Drawing on this narrative, and on some pamphlets dealing with Italian brigands, Scott did his best to produce a publishable story, but his death later in the year left the manuscript of the still uncompleted
Bizarro, and another novel called
The Siege of Malta, in the hands of his son-in-law and literary executor
J. G. Lockhart. Lockhart did not consider either work good enough for publication, but in his biography of Scott he included the synopsis of Il Bizarro's adventures recorded in Scott's journal. Lockhart's poor opinion of both novels was shared by
John Buchan, who in 1932 said he "hoped that no literary
resurrectionist will ever be guilty of the crime of giving them to the world." In 2008
Bizarro was finally published, together with
The Siege of Malta, in an edition by J. H. Alexander, Judy King, and Graham Tulloch, published by Edinburgh University Press and Columbia University Press. This edition presents a literal transcript of the manuscript together with a reading text in which the more obvious errors are corrected. It also includes a CD-ROM scan of the manuscript. ==Notes==