Showing posts with label Welsh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Welsh. Show all posts

Monday, 15 August 2011

Pandora's Handbag: Adventures in the Book World by Elizabeth Young

Young wrote two kinds of articles, reviews and social commentary.  In the former category are the reviews collected here of Hunter S Thompson, Herbert Huncke, William Burroughs, Brett Easton Ellis, Alice Munro, Greil Marcus, Alice Hoffman, Dennis Cooper, TC Boyle, David Callard, Poppy Z Brite, James Kelman, Irvine Welsh, Alan Warner, Terry Prachett, Christopher Wood, Iain Sinclair, Jonathan Meades, Will Self, Michael Bracewell and Robert Harris.  Her reviews are incisive and learned both in literary and cultural terms, for instance in her writing on the Celtic renaissance of the 90s which included Warner and Welsh she sees clearly the anti establishment ethos of writers disenchanted with the misrepresentation of Scotland as all about tartan, shortbread and beautiful landscape searching for a way to speak of their world of desperately low expectations, drugs, of isolation from society and of their own culture.


Her other articles take these themes on in a more direct fashion, challenging and lambasting the current 'war on drugs' government and society attitude to illegal drugs that replaced the 'British system' of prescribing to addicts and has resulted in massive gang warfare, illegal trafficking, and death and maiming from the adulterated drugs themselves and supposed solutions such as methadone.  She speaks from within the affected society and the urgency of her calls for change are informed by this.

But Young is also funny and witty, this is a good collection that made me think.   And I have found two other people that are sure they are a gay man trapped in a woman's body, I thought I was just nuts...

Wednesday, 17 June 2009

One City by Alexander McCall Smith, Ian Rankin & Irvine Welsh, introduction by JK Rowling

A great little slim volume containing short stories by each of the authors on the subject of social inclusion. McCall Smith's gentle romance is about an Indian man experiencing the culture shock of Edinburgh, Rankin weaves a clever story about a homeless illusionist, and Welsh comes through in his usual unrelenting style with a story about an escaped tiger, hilarious. Can't wait to read the next One City Trust book: Crimespotting