Rating: 5/5
Review:
Brilliant
I thought Laidlaw was quite brilliant. I tried it without much
expectation but I found it gripping, haunting, thoughtful and
outstandingly well written.
First published in
1977, Inspector Laidlaw is a thoughtful, moral detective moving in a
thoroughly immoral Glasgow underworld. He has to investigate a
horrible sex-killing, while some of Glasgow’s hardest criminal
bosses also try to track down the perpetrator. It’s beautifully
done: there is a superb sense of time and place, an ever-present
atmosphere of suppressed violence (which only becomes graphic reality
once, making it shockingly effective) and a thoughtful eye cast over
everything.
William McIlvanney’s
writing is just superb; almost poetic sometimes and always remarkably
evocative. Some typical nuggets include “They drank, considering
each other from opposite sides of an attitude,” or “...not so
much a pub as a transit-camp to dereliction.” He can also produce
the odd simile worthy of Chandler, like “The old man opened the
door with all the ease of the Venus de Milo cracking a safe.”
Through Laidlaw, McIlvanney also brings a subtle, insightful view of
the morals and origins of the people and events. I found it an utter
joy to read, in spite of the bleak story and many deeply unpleasant
characters.
This is a wonderful
discovery for me and I will be reading more McIlvanney in the very
near future. Very, very warmly recommended.
No comments:
Post a Comment