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Original Title: Glue
ISBN: 0099436922 (ISBN13: 9780099436928)
Edition Language: English
Series: Terry Lawson #1
Setting: Edinburgh, Scotland
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Glue (Terry Lawson #1) Paperback | Pages: 556 pages
Rating: 3.79 | 13288 Users | 282 Reviews

Explanation To Books Glue (Terry Lawson #1)

Glue is the story of four boys growing up in the Edinburgh schemes, and about the loyalties, the experiences - and the secrets - that hold them together into their thirties. Four boys becoming men: Juice Terry, the work-shy fanny-merchant, with corkscrew curls and sticky fingers; Billy the boxer: driven, controlled, playing to his strengths; Carl, the Milky Bar Kid, drifting along to his own soundtrack; and the doomed Gally - who has one less skin than everyone else and seems to find catastrophe at every corner. As we follow their lives from the seventies into the new century - from punk to techno, from speed to Es - we can see each of them trying to struggle out from under the weight of the conditioning of class and culture, peer pressure and their parents' hopes that maybe their sons will do better than they did. What binds the four of them is the friendship formed by the scheme, their school, and their ambition to escape from both; their loyalty fused in street morality: back up your mates, don't hit women and, most importantly, never grass - on anyone. Despite its scale and ambition, Glue has all Irvine Welsh's usual pace and vigour, crackling dialogue, scabrous set-pieces and black, black humour, but it is also a grown-up book about growing up - about the way we live our lives, and what happens to us when things become unstuck.

Specify Appertaining To Books Glue (Terry Lawson #1)

Title:Glue (Terry Lawson #1)
Author:Irvine Welsh
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 556 pages
Published:2002 by Vintage (first published 2001)
Categories:Fiction. Contemporary. Novels. Drama

Rating Appertaining To Books Glue (Terry Lawson #1)
Ratings: 3.79 From 13288 Users | 282 Reviews

Write Up Appertaining To Books Glue (Terry Lawson #1)
This is the story of Andrew Galloway, Juice Terry Lawson, Billy Birrell, and Carl Ewart, 4 friends from Edinburg, and the trials and tribulations each goes through as they grow up.It's written mostly in the Scottish dialect that Welsh fans know well, so if you've read Trainspotting, you should be able to get through it.Most excellent read.

"What would have happened if Jesus had been late for the last supper, boys?""Eh would've goat fuck all tae eat."This is really more of a 3-star book in its majority, but a 4-star book in truth, and I'll explain why in a minute.If you read Welsh, this one will seem mighty familiar: a bunch of scheming schemies growing up in Edinburgh's slums, except where in novels like Trainspotting the central axis was heroin, among other drugs, here it tries to be more of a warmer-type novel of friendships and

This was one of the first Welsh books I discovered, and I loved it. It's as heartbreaking as it is funny and the four main characters are bizarrely likeable. The fourth of the five sections is not quite so captivating as the others but it doesn't detract from the novel too much at all.

I think this is Welsh's most soulful novel. It doesn't try to make itself as interesting as some of his other works, just letting the characters move the reader. It's a little more sprawling than I would have liked, but that's just me. The dialect can get confusing when it gets particularly thick, but that's normal and expected since I'm not used to trying to understand people from that background. Besides, it's really a necessary part of Welsh's books as I see it, and necessary for

I found this book to be an engaging, crazy, and even heartfelt account about the lifelong friendship between the four childhood friends. This is one of those books that has stuck in my head since the one and only time I read it. Perhaps because I could relate in some ways to the characters, I think about this book and the stories every so often. I also found it refreshing that Welsh wrote a structured novel with linear events. I also appreciated that he returned some of the old characters from

Fantastic. Great characters. Loved following these boys.

This guy flabbergasts me, especially this one, Glue. It is an absolute wank-fest. The beer-fest holiday in Germany was so over the top I was wondering if it might have been a fantasy plagiarized from some hormone-crazed schoolboy son of a Presbyterian minister. What utter implausible garbage it was, the whole book, from cover to cover. And then the irresponsible glamorization of drug taking this moron indulges in. Speed is like sucking lollipops, real heros do skag. Mind, you might get AIDS and

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