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Destination: Glasgow Departure Time: 1970s
William McIlvanney’s Glasgow is a city worth exploring – with care.
Destination: Glasgow Departure Time: 1970s
William McIlvanney’s Glasgow is a city worth exploring – with care.
Meet Jack Laidlaw, the original damaged detective.
The novel is a journey around this city of dank despair – and when it opens with a girl’s body found in one of the city’s parks, it is up to Laidlaw and his team to find out what happened. the race is on. However the real race seems to be between them finding the killer and the girl’s father finding who killed his daughter. The father has contacts in the city’s underworld which changes things.
Glasgow of course is a major character in the Laidlaw novel and the descriptions are evocative of a dark side of the city that you won’t necessarily want to visit. McIlvanney’s Glasgow is a bleak place indeed.
You could walk for as long as you liked in this city and it wouldn’t know you. You could call every part of it by name. But it wouldn’t answer.
This is the city of the 1970s not just the streets and the city atmosphere but the attitudes, lifestyle, drinking culture and of course the language. All focusing on building a highly evocative image of the underbelly of the city, its people and the time period –
“Across the street the door of the Corn Exchange opened suddenly and a small man popped out onto the pavement, as if the pub had rifted. He foundered in a way that suggested fresh air wasn’t his element
The Glaswegian dialect makes for some evocative Tartan Noir gems too –
To Harkness speech seemed like a foreign language here.
‘Oh, they’re in an awfy state, sir,’ the old man said. ‘Sadie especially. Ye couldny get sense oot o’her. They’ve had an awfy time , ye know.
This may not be the kind of tour that a guide from Visit Scotland might offer but this link takes you to the real Glasgow and indeed remember that this IS fiction and that Glasgow is one of the friendliest and cultural cities in Scotland. Not to mention the walks beside the canals, the pedestrian city centre and the architecture..