Author:Irvine Welsh
Rebecca Navarro, best-selling authoress of Regency romances, suffers a paralysing stroke. Assisted by her nurse, Rebecca plans her revenge on her unfaithful husband. But will Freddy Royle, hospital trustee, celebrity and necrophiliac, thwart those plans? Dave Thornton, soccer thug, has lost his heart to flawed beauty Samantha Worthington. Together they go in search of the man who marketed the drug that crippled her - in order to cripple him. Lloyd from Leith has a transfiguring passion for the unhappily married Heather. Together they explore the true nature of house music and chemical romance. Will their ardour fizzle and die in the grim backstreets of Edinburgh, or will it ignite and blaze like a thousand suns?
A pure writer, producing staggering feats of storytelling... The skill of a master
—— IndependentWelsh writes with a skill, wit and compassion that amounts to genius. He is the best thing to have happened to British writing for decades
—— Sunday TimesUrgent, violent, bleakly funny prose
—— Nick Hornby , Times literary SupplementWelsh's world is spiky, trashy and brutal. It is also brilliant, hilarious and infused with a kind of punkish morality
—— Sunday ExpressThe poet laureate of the chemical generation
—— FaceThis new series of Central European Classics is important well beyond simply providing 'good reads'.
—— Stephen Vizinczey , Daily TelegraphEnright writes beautifully about the distance of desire
—— Financial TimesDazzling ...These narrative snapshots are skilfully framed and in-focus, the language forthright and fresh
—— Time OutThis short story collection gives those new to her oeuvre a chance to delve into gems from her past...precociously vibrant
—— Melissa McClements , Financial TimesAll the elements of Welsh's best work remain in tact here: the brilliant imagination, the phonetically-transcribed Scots dialect, the humour, the gritty realism
—— Woman's WayWhat's striking about these early stories is that the thicker Welsh was steeped in the primordial goo of his Edinburgh Scots phonetics, the better the storytelling got
—— Alexander Linklater , ObserverAs you would expect, the stories in this collection involve a certain amount of cultural tourism to the lower depths, undertaken with black humour... Welsh's relish for degradation covers up a strong sentimental streak
—— Victor Sebestyen , Sunday TimesWelsh's transcription of Scots dialect is brilliant... Welsh also has a fabulous sense of the absurd... The overall vibe of these stories is dark and grim. And fierily, fiercely funny
—— Brandon Robshaw , Independent on SundayA sparkling and adventurous writer
—— Dennis Potter