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Irvine Welsh - Filth

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  • Book:
    Filth
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    Random House
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  • Year:
    1998
  • ISBN:
    9781407018485
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    4 / 5
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Filth: summary, description and annotation

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Amazon.com Review Talk about truth in advertising! Irvine Welshs novel about an evil Edinburgh cop is filthy enough to please the most crud-craving fans of his blockbuster debut, . Like , matches its nastiness with a maniacal, deeply peeved sense of humor. Though one does feel the need to escape this train wreck of a narrative from time to time for a shower and some chamomile tea, just as often Welsh provokes a belly laugh with an extraordinarily perverse and cruelly funny set piece. Nicely violent turns of phrase litter the ghastly landscape of his tale. Our hero, Detective Sergeant Bruce Robertson, is a cross between Harvey Keitel in and John Belushi in . His task is to nab a killer who has brained the son of the Ghanaian ambassador, but bigoted Bruce is more urgently concerned with coercing sex from teenage Ecstasy dealers, planning vice tours of Amsterdam, and mulling over his lurid love life. Hes also got a tapeworm, whose monologue is printed right down the middle of many pages. Heres one of this unusually articulate parasites realizations: My problem is that I seem to have quite a simple biological structure with no mechanism for the transference of all my grand and noble thoughts into fine deeds. Welshs real strength is comic tough talk and inventive slang. The murder mystery helps organize his tendency to sprawl, but the engine of his art is wry, harsh dialogue. At one point, his books hogged the entire top half of Scotlands Top Ten Bestsellers list--and half the buyers of had never bought a book before. The reason is not that Welsh is the best novelist who ever got short-listed for the Booker Prize. It is that he is that rarest of phenomena, an original voice.

Irvine Welsh: author's other books


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About the Author

Irvine Welsh is the author of nine other works of fiction, most recently Crime, published by Jonathan Cape in 2008. He lives in Dublin.

ALSO BY IRVINE WELSH

Fiction

Trainspotting

The Acid House

Marabou Stork Nightmares

Ecstasy

Glue

Porno

The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs

If You Liked School, Youll Love Work . . .

Crime

Drama

Youll Have Had Your Hole

Screenplay

The Acid House

A serious, perceptive and hideously funny study of reactionary temperament . . . As a humourist, a moralist, and a violent horror writer Welsh is firing on all cylinders in this one . . . probably the best thing he has done since

Trainspotting

Sunday Times

There is an energy and vigour in Welshs invention and his handling of prose that reminds that reminds one of the great, coarse, vivid novelists of the 19th century . . . there is no denying that [this novel] has a peculiar kind of brilliance

Sunday Telegraph

Filth provides yet more evidence that Irvine Welsh is a uniquely exciting and gifted writer

Financial Times

Better than Ecstasy and equal to Trainspotting

GQ

As haunting as his psychological masterpiece, Marabou Stork Nightmares . . . The lavd up Filth beats the luvd up

Ecstasy hands down

The Face

Written in the trademark Welsh vernacular, Filth is a wonderfully black and funny novel about sleaze, power, and the abuse of just about everything

Himself

The writing and structure are obscenely stylish, and Welshs wrecked way of looking at life is compelling

Mail on Sunday

A masterful piece of comic invention . . . superb

Yorkshire Post

One of the joys of this new novel is that it reminds us of his strengths as a storyteller . . . Detective Bruce Robertson is assigned to the case and it is his monologue that unfolds to reveal a heart of darkness that would make Joseph Conrad blush. His character is driven solely by misanthropic hate, a devils brew of every prejudice known to man and a few that are uniquely his own. He is consumed by his fury to the point of implosion, unable to function without a target for his loathing. He is plagued by tapeworms and scabrous rashes, metaphors for a self hell-bent on devouring its own bile . . . It is an exploration into the fragility of conscience, a tale of how memory and imaginings can make madmen of us all

Express

Filth marks a return to form for Irvine Welsh . . . In a toxic, chemical generation way, Welsh is our best writer of surreal social satire

The Big Issue

For Susan Andrew Adeline and Jo Thanks for keeping me out of trouble I - photo 1

For Susan, Andrew, Adeline and Jo.

Thanks for keeping me out of trouble.

I started making up a list of people to thank but it got too long you know who you are. Eternal gratitude to everybody whos supported the stuff Ive done (with their hard-earned cash or through shoplifting) and who can see through all the bullshit, both positive and negative, that tends to surround this sort of thing.

Ta.

Irvine Welsh

We shall do best to think of life as a desengano, as a process of disillusionment: since this is, clearly enough, what everything that happens to us is calculated to produce.

Arthur Schopenhauer

When you woke up this morning everything you had was gone. By half past ten your head was going ding-dong. Ringing like a bell from your head down to your toes, like a voice telling you there was something you should know. Last night you were flying but today youre so low aint it times like these that make you wonder if youll ever know the meaning of things as they appear to others; wives, mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers. Dont you wish you didnt function, wish you didnt think beyond the next paycheck and the next little drink? Well you do so make up your mind to go on, cos when you woke up this morning everything you had was gone.

Love, Love, Love & The Doctor

(fromWoke Up This Morningby the Alabama 3)

Contents

Prologue

The Games

The Crimes

Wheels Of Steel

Investigations

Carole

Equal Opportunities

Coarse Briefings

I Get A Little Sentimental Over You

At Home With The Blades

Turning Off The Gas

Carole Again

Infected Areas

The Lie Of The Land

Our Cover Is Blown

Cok City

Still Carole

The Nightwatch

The Rash

Goals

. . . the essentially depraved nature of the creature that she married . . .

Post-Holiday Blues

A Testimonial

Surprise Party

More Carole

Private Lessons

Ladies Night

Carole Remembers Australia

Worms and Promotions

Masonic Outings

Christmas Shopping

Not Crashing

Car Stereo Chews Up Michael Bolton Tape

To Lodge A Complaint

A Society Of Secrets

A Sportsmans Dinner

Come In Charlie

More Carole?

The Tales Of A Tapeworm

Home Is The Darkness

Prologue

The trouble with people like him is that they think that they can brush off people like me. Like I was nothing. They dont understand the type of world were living in now; all those menaced souls clamouring for attention and recognition. He was a very arrogant young man, so full of himself.

No longer. Now hes groaning, blood spilling thickly from the wounds in his head and his yellow, unfocused eyes are gandering around, desperately trying to find clarity, some meaning in the bleakness, the darkness around him. It must be lonely.

Hes trying to speak now. What is it that he is trying to say to me?

Help. Police. Hospital.

Or was it help please hospital? It doesnt really matter, that little point of detail because his life is ebbing away: human existence distilled to begging for the emergency services.

You pushed me away mister. You rejected me. You tricked me and spoiled things between me and my true love. Ive seen you before. Long ago, just lying there as you are now. Black, broken, dying. I was glad then and Im glad now.

I reach into my bag and I pull out my claw hammer.

Part of me is elsewhere as Im bringing it down on his head. He cant resist my blows. Theyd done him in good, the others.

After two fruitless strikes I feel a surge of euphoria on my third as his head bursts open. His blood fairly skooshes out, covering his face like an oily waterfall and driving me into a frenzy; Im smashing at his head and his skull is cracking and opening and Im digging the claw hammer into the matter of his brain and it smells but thats only him pissing and shitting and the fumes are sticking fast in the still winter air and I wrench the hammer out, and stagger backwards to watch his twitching death throes, seeing him coming from terror to that graceless state of someone who knows that he is definitely falling and I feel myself losing my balance in those awkward shoes and I correct myself, turning and moving down the old stairway into the street.

Out on the pavement its very cold and totally deserted. I look at a tin-foil carton with a discarded takeaway left in it. Someone has pished in its remains and rice floats on a small freezing reservoir of urine. I move away. The cold has slipped into my bones with every step down the road jarring, making me feel like Im going to splinter. Flesh and bone seem separate, as if a void exists between them. Theres no fear or regret but no elation or sense of triumph either. Its just a job that had to be done.

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