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William McIlvanney

    25 novembre 1936 – 5 dicembre 2015

    William McIlvanney è stato un autore scozzese celebrato per la sua fusione di realismo crudo e prosa poetica. I suoi romanzi, spesso ambientati sullo sfondo del Glasgow degli anni '70, approfondiscono temi di resilienza e complessità morale. Ritenuto il progenitore del 'Tartan Noir', l'influenza di McIlvanney è profonda, in particolare nella narrativa poliziesca dove il suo detective Jack Laidlaw incarna una profonda intuizione psicologica. Attraverso la sua voce distintiva e il suo potente senso del luogo, McIlvanney ha catturato l'essenza dell'identità scozzese e delle realtà sociali.

    The Big Man
    Remedy is None
    Walking Wounded
    Strange Loyalties. Fremde Treue, englische Ausgabe
    A Gift from Nessus
    Strange Loyalties
    • Strange Loyalties

      • 384pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      When his brother dies stepping out in front of a car, Jack Laidlaw is determined to find out what really happened. Laidlaw begins an emotional quest through Glasgow's underworld, and into the past. He discovers as much about himself as about the brother he has lost, in a search that leads to a shattering climax.

      Strange Loyalties
    • Walking Wounded

      • 192pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      'A superb collection: a series of brief lives which McIlvanney passes through the eye of a very sharp needle' Literary Review

      Walking Wounded
    • Remedy is None

      • 256pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      McIlvanney's first novel, winner of the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize Charlie Grant, an intense young student at Glasgow University, watches his father die. Overwhelmed by the memory of this humble yet dignified death, Charlie is left to face his own fierce resentment for his adulterous mother. With shades of Hamlet and Camus, William McIlvanney's first novel is a revelatory portrait of youth, of society, and of family.

      Remedy is None
    • Docherty

      • 384pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      At the end of 1903, in working-class town in the West of Scotland, Tam Docherty's youngest son, Conn is born. Tam is determined that life and the pits won't swallow up his boy the way it has him. Courageous and questioning, Docherty emerges as a leader of almost indomitable strength, but in a close-knit community tradition is a powerful opponent.

      Docherty
    • Laidlaw, English Edition

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      "When a young woman is found brutally murdered on Glasgow Green, only Laidlaw stands a chance of finding her murderer from amongst the hard men, gangland villains and self-made moneymen who lurk in the city's shadows"--Publisher's description.

      Laidlaw, English Edition
    • The Kiln

      • 288pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Featuring the same family, two generations on, as DochertyTom Docherty was 17 in the summer of 1955. With school behind him and a summer job at a brick works, Tom had his whole life before him. Years later, alone in a rented flat in Edinburgh and lost in memories, Tom recalls the intellectual and sexual awakening of his youth. In looking back, Tom discovers that only by understanding where he comes from can he make sense of his life as it is now.

      The Kiln