Sir
Walter Scott visited the loch in 1814 and described it vividly: :“Rarely human eye has known :A scene so stern as that dread lake, :With its dark ledge of barren stone...”
Lord Tennyson reported more prosaically: :“Loch Coruisk, said to be the wildest scene in the Highlands, I failed in seeing. After a fatiguing expedition over the roughest ground on a wet day we arrived at the banks of the loch, and made acquaintance with the extremest tiptoes of the hills, all else being thick wool-white fog.”
Mark Haddon used the remote location of the loch for a portal in the 1992 children's novel
Gridzbi Spudvetch!, re-issued in 2009 as
Boom!. A description of the path from Elgol (including a
traverse of The Bad Step) is included in the narrative, as is the Memorial Hut.
Robert Macfarlane visited the loch and its valley whilst writing his 2007
travelogue The Wild Places, and a description of the area forms the book's third chapter. ==Art==