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Irvine WelshIrvine Welsh
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BiographyIrvine Welsh was born in Edinburgh in 1958. He lived in London after leaving school, but returned to his native city where he worked in the Council's housing department. He gained a degree in computer science and studied for an MBA at Heriot Watt University.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Drama, Fiction, Screenplay, Short stories     BibliographyPast Tense: Four Stories from a Novel Clocktower, 1992 Trainspotting Secker & Warburg, 1993 The Acid House Cape, 1994 Marabou Stork Nightmares Cape, 1995 Children of Albion Rovers (contributor) Rebel Inc. / Canongate, 1996 Ecstasy: Three Tales of Chemical Romance Cape, 1996 Trainspotting/Headstate (plays) Minerva, 1996 Filth Cape, 1998 You'll Have Had Your Hole (play) Methuen, 1998 Glue Cape, 2001 The Weekenders (contributor) Ebury Press, 2001 Porno Cape, 2002 Alive and Kicking (with David Bryce and Simon Pia) Mainstream Publishing, 2005 Babylon Heights (with Dean Cavanagh) Vintage, 2006 One City (with Ian Rankin and Alexander McCall Smith) Polygon, 2006 The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs Cape, 2006 If You Liked School You'll Love Work Cape, 2007 Crime Cape, 2008 Days Like This: A Portrait of Scotland Through the Extraordinary Stories of Its People (contributor) Luath Press, 2009 Reheated Cabbage Cape, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1994 Scottish Arts Council Book Award Trainspotting 2002 Saltire Society Scottish Book of the Year Award (shortlist) Porno    
  Critical PerspectiveTwo common complaints of literary reviewers when considering the work of Welsh are that his books are read by people who don’t normally read and that their author has a negative view of literature (he prefers the title ‘cultural activist’ to ‘writer’). If either of these claims is true, then they perhaps deserve more credit than lofty condemnation. If Welsh really is managing to engage a culturally illiterate audience that has traditionally remained beyond the influence of the bourgeois novel then this is a form of ‘cultural activism’ most other ‘writers’ of his generation seem to have turned their backs on.
Marabou Stork Nightmares (1995), Welsh’s second novel, followed quickly (some say too quickly) on the heels of the first. A rambling narrative (but then these are nightmares), it is structured around the memories of a football hooligan who is unconscious in hospital. Marabou was followed soon after by Ecstasy (1996), a collection of three novellas and critically the least successful of his books. Welsh had to wait until 1998 and the publication of Filth (1998) before receiving warmer reviews. The filth of Filth refers principally to Detective Sergeant Bruce Robertson. However, the title is not just a nod to the content of the book but to its form, its textuality. Filth is both the subject of the book and a reference to the book itself. The title demands we read it literally. If filth is a metaphorical reference to the police (Bruce Robertson works for Lothian and Borders force), then Robertson is ‘filth’ in a more literal sense: a serial rapist, thief, and drug abuser. If trains are pretty much absent from Trainspotting then glue is about the only substance not taken by the characters of Glue (2001), one of Welsh’s most adventurous novels to date. Like Marabou Stork Nightmares, Glue centres on the lives of a group of Edinburgh ‘schemies’ and charts the coming of age of four young men over four decades and over 400 pages.
Welsh’s mid-decade work was dominated by a couple of collaborative efforts including Babylon Heights (with Dean Cavanagh, 2006), and One City (with Ian Rankin and Alexander McCall Smith, 2006). Babylon Heights is a bizarre but extremely funny play. Spinning off from The Wizard of Oz, it imagines four munchkins in a Californian Hotel room getting high on drugs and alcohol. One City is a collection of three stories, one of them by Welsh, written for the One City charity, which seeks to combat social exclusion in the city.
The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs (2006) unfolds during the US elections of 2004, and in tandem with the unfolding of Edinburgh-based Health Officer, Danny Skinner’s unhealthy obsession with tv programme ‘The Secrets of Masterchef’. It is an obsession that takes Danny to America in a narrative exploring the conjunctions between food, pornography and celebrity. Described in the Financial Times as ‘Welsh at his best’, The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs was hailed by various critics as a return to form.
In his tenth and most recent novel, Crime (2008), Welsh opts for one of his trademark titles: a single word, a blunt literalism. However, beneath the in your face cover is a surprisingly restrained handling of a risqué (even for Welsh) subject: paedophile rings. Ray Lennox, formerly of Filth, is a policeman who ends up in America on the trail of a serial child abuser. It is a book that is currently dividing the critics, as The New York Times summarised: ‘Crime is an ambitious, compassionate and serious book; many of Welsh’s fans, however, will miss the trash talk, the perverse comedy and, yes, even the spastics.’
Dr James Procter, 2009  
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