Lanark: a life in 4 books (86 page)

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Authors: Alasdair Gray

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BOOK: Lanark: a life in 4 books
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‘Compelling, a game of hide and seek where one never knows what will happen next … direct, stylish, crisp … a great adventure.’ Naomi Mitchison,
Spectator

‘Gray is a master at rummaging in the dustbins of the mind … Important and compelling.’
Daily Telegraph

‘The most remarkable new novel I have read this year, and in many ways the most remarkable book of any kind … the mature work, long in gestation, of an artist-writer of unique gifts in both modes, here most powerfully brought together.’
Herald

‘Probably the greatest Scottish novel of the century … it marked the beginning of a new era in Scottish writing.’
Observer


Lanark
is one of the seminal works of Scottish literature, a book credited with kick-starting Scotland’s literary renaissance of the past two decades.’
Sunday Times

‘I read
Lanark
, mesmerised, in a few massive all-night sittings … subtle and complex, like an alarm clock going off, a wake-up call to another place, a place that was all around me, which I was part of, but that now seemed unfamiliar and exciting.’
Scotsman

‘At times exuberant, at times despairing, always vivid … Curious and informed, angry and rational … not afraid of fun or of confessing its vanities or of having Big Ideas.’
Sunday Times

‘This extraordinary masterpiece … is profoundly perceptive about the ways in which our society is destroying itself. Yet it manages to be funny and is written in a beautifully lucid prose.’
Times Literary
Supplement

‘Wonderful, expansive prose … a novel that is as rewarding to return to as it is vast in ambition: a modern classic in the true sense of the word.’
Big Issue in Scotland

‘The most remarkable first novel I’ve read for years … It’s unfair that any man, even from Dennistoun, should be so gifted … [
Lanark
] is allegorical, factual, political, cannibal (and very much so) … this is a book which will be remembered.’
Evening Times

First published in Great Britain in 1981
by Canongate Books Ltd,
14 High Street, Edinburgh, EH1 1TE

This digital edition first published in 2008
by Canongate Books Ltd

Copyright © Alasdair Gray, 1969, 1981
Tailpiece copyright © Alasdair Gray, 2001
Introduction copyright © William Boyd, 2007

Portions of this work originally appeared in
Scottish International Review, Glasgow University Magazine
and
Words Magazine

The moral rights of the author have been asserted

British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available on request from the British Library

ISBN 978 1 84767 374 9

www.meetatthegate.com

Table of Contents

Introduction

BOOK THREE

CHAPTER 1: The Elite

CHAPTER 2: Dawn and Lodgings

CHAPTER 3: Manuscript

CHAPTER 4: A Party

CHAPTER 5: Rima

CHAPTER 6: Mouths

CHAPTER 7: The Institute

CHAPTER 8: Doctors

CHAPTER 9: A Dragon

CHAPTER 10: Explosions

CHAPTER 11: Diet and Oracle

PROLOGUE telling how a nonentity was made, and made oracular by a financial genius discovering his sensual infancy

BOOK ONE

CHAPTER 12: The War Begins

CHAPTER 13: A Hostel

CHAPTER 14: Ben Rua

CHAPTER 15: Normal

CHAPTER 16: Underworlds

CHAPTER 17: The Key

CHAPTER 18: Nature

CHAPTER 19: Mrs. Thaw Disappears

CHAPTER 20: Employers

INTERLUDE to remind us of what we are in danger of forgetting: that Thaw’s story exists within the hull of Lanark’s

BOOK TWO

CHAPTER 21: The Tree

CHAPTER 22: Kenneth McAlpin

CHAPTER 23: Meetings

CHAPTER 24: Marjory Laidlaw

CHAPTER 25: Breaking

CHAPTER 26: Chaos

CHAPTER 27: Genesis

CHAPTER 28: Work

CHAPTER 29: The Way Out

CHAPTER 30: Surrender

BOOK FOUR

CHAPTER 31: Nan

CHAPTER 32: Council Corridors

CHAPTER 33: A Zone

CHAPTER 34: Intersections

CHAPTER 35: Cathedral

CHAPTER 36: Chapterhouse

CHAPTER 37: Alexander Comes

CHAPTER 38: Greater Unthank

CHAPTER 39: Divorce

CHAPTER 40: Provan

EPILOGUE annotated by Sidney Workman with an index of diffuse and imbedded Plagiarisms

CHAPTER 41: Climax

CHAPTER 42: Catastrophe

CHAPTER 43: Explanation

CHAPTER 44: End

TAILPIECE: How Lanark grew

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