Glue by Irvine Welsh, , 0099285924 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
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Glue, cheap new, used books  Glue
Author: Irvine Welsh  
ISBN: 0099285924   /   Paperback
Publisher: Vintage   /   2002-04-04
List Price: £7.99
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Editorial Reviews:
With a title like Glue, it would seem reasonable to assume that Irvine Welsh's new novel is a profound reflection upon the pitfalls of solvent abuse. In fact, the glue of Welsh's book deals with the bonds that unite four boys growing up together in "the scheme", the "slum-clearance" flats of Edinburgh, whose optimistic construction in the 1970s give way to the poverty, unemployment and crime of the 1980s and 1990s. It is this despair that defines the lives of Welsh's central protagonists: Terry Lawson, work-shy and sex-mad; Carl Ewart, budding DJ; Billy Birrell, boxer, and Andrew Galloway, a drug addict who tests HIV-positive.

Glue is a bildungsroman of growing up bad, recounted in Welsh's inimitable style. The novel follows the boys through their early forays into sex, drink, drugs and football violence, written in the author's trademark vernacular. Carl Ewart poses crucial questions such as: "How dae ah chat up a bird?" and "Do I wear a rubber johnny? (If so, nae problem, I've started trying them on so ah ken how tae fir them)". Welsh also attempts occasional political comment on the friends' difficulties: Billy Birrell reflects: "Having money is the only way to get respect. Desperate, but that's the world we live in now." However, Welsh is better at grotesque moments of sex and violence and offhand one-liners, such as: "Guilt and shaggin, they go the gither like fish 'n' chips". Fans of Trainspotting will love Glue, even down to the brief appearance of Begbie and Renton, but others may feel that the novel is just more of the same, and that this performance finds Welsh stuck in a rut. --Jerry Brotton


Customer Reviews:
IRVINE WELSH CLASSIC     
For me, Welsh's best - indeed one of the best novels i have ever read.
Just shades it from Trainspotting & Marabou Stork Nightmares.
Absoluteley AMAZING characterisation & set in the same fictional universe as Trainspotting/Porno with some familiar names.

Truth is the last Welsh novel I read was Porno & I was massiveley dissapointed; I'd be grateful for any comments advising over his later work....
Great, great book     
I've read a few of Welsh's books and this is easily one of the best. It's trademark Welsh - gritty, and harshly real, but this one will actually leave you feeling good about life in general.
A fantastically original novel     
Funny how the idea of a novel following a group of lads every generation has never really come to a British writer outside of Irvine Welsh. It is a fantastic idea, a brilliant one, and "Glue" could be Welsh's finest novel. The hype does not live up to "Trainspotting" or "Filth", but it's a book that, sooner or later, everybody who loves Welsh's writing will come to and will absolutely love it.

It follows the lifes of a group of lads growing up in Edinburgh, whom turn to sex, drugs, violence, and hooliganism. The storyline is a basic Welsh plot, which is used in many of his novels. However, the style is different. It does not focus on his narrative structure ("I cannae ken"), but it does on the story. I felt that "Trainspotting", as brilliant as it is, does not particually focus on the story but on the characters. "Glue" does both.

Are the characters likeable? They are as likeable as Mark Renton in "Trainspotting", or Rebecca in "Ecstasy". They are disturbed characters, and they are bad people, but from Welsh's point of view they are shown as "alright people". I think Irvine Welsh is fantastic at doing that, and "Glue" could be his finest hour.
edinbra     
glue is a great story of growing up on the schemes and enduring friendships.Regarding it being written in east coast dialect,im originally from the west coast and found the dialect no problem.Anybody giving up reading the book because of this is missing a great true to life tale of what its like to grow up on the schemes of scotland.I could relate the characters in this book to my experiences growing up.
My first irvine welsh...loved it     
This book is the first irvine whelsh book i have read, i must say i loved it and it got me back into to reading mostly irvine welsh.
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