Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh

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Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh "Trainspotting" is about a group of addicts living in Edinburgh,

Scotland. The novel describes their different ways of living,

surviving and being. We are introduced to a lifestyle far away from

our own, but yet well known through series of films and books on the

subject. It's a lifestyle filled with cheating, stealing, fighting,

lying and escaping. We follow the characters through a collection of

short stories, which are tied together by the characters and related

events. They are all addicted to something, whether it's heroin,

alcohol, adrenaline or even sex. Their addictions represent, in a way,

their escape from society and reality. They are so convinced of the

meaninglessness of any effort, the hopelessness of the future, and the

humiliation of being Scottish, "the most wretched, servile, miserable,

pathetic trash that was ever shagged into civilisation," that taking

drugs begins to seem as a logical option, even to the reader. The

drugs transform an otherwise methodical life into a more intense and

fleeting adventure. At times it is darkly comic. This book is

predominantly depressing when you come to realise that the lives of

these people are nothing but a dead end, literally. Trainspotting

attempts to deal with the current drug culture. It does not judge and

it doesn't glorify. It simply describes.

"Trainspotting" was first published in 1993, but it was the making of

the film in 1996 that really set speed to its popularity. This was the

Scottish author, Irvine Welsh's debut novel. He has also written a

second novel, "Marabou Stork Ni...

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...as a minor difficulty compared to the problems I had

catching the context of it all. (This also made it very hard to write

the summary.) Finding out at each new chapter, who was telling the

story this time, was a huge challenge! In a strange way I enjoyed it,

though, but not until I had seen the film. It helped me to find the

connections and to put faces to some of the names. One thing I could

mention about the book compared to the film is that the book is much

more complex and has more depth and colour to it. I must say that I

liked the film, but I enjoyed the book more, even though it was hard

to read. I can absolutely recommend it, but not if you feel that you

don't handle reading English very well in the first place. I must say,

I was near giving up at times, but even so I just couldn't put the

book down after all.

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