Irvine Welsh

Men in Love
Irvine WelshIt is the late 1980s, the closing years of Thatcher’s Britain. For the Trainspotting crew, a new era is about to begin – a time for hope, for love, for raving.
Leaving heroin behind and separated after a drug deal gone wrong, Renton, Sick Boy, Spud and Begbie each want to feel alive. They fill their days with sex and romance and trying to get ahead; they follow the call of the dance floor, with its promise of joy and redemption.
Sick Boy starts an intense relationship with Amanda, his ‘princess’ – rich, connected, everything that he is not. When the pair set a date for their wedding, Sick Boy sees a chance for his generation to take control at last. But as the 1990s dawn, will finding love be the answer to the group’s dreams or just another doomed quest?
Irvine Welsh’s sequel to his iconic bestseller Trainspotting tells a story of riotous adventures, wild new passions, and young men determined to get the most out of life.
Praise for Men in Love
The arrival of Trainspotting was an earth-shaking cultural moment and it had a huge influence on me… It shines with humour and friendship. Every character here is alive
DOUGLAS STUART, Booker Prize-winning author of Shuggie Bain and Young Mungo (on Trainspotting)
The voice of punk, grown up, grown wiser and grown eloquent
Sunday Times (on Trainspotting)
So propulsive...about as much fun as you can have between two book covers
The Times (on Dead Men's Trousers)
The arrival of Trainspotting was an earth-shaking cultural moment and it had a huge influence on me… It shines with humour and friendship. Every character here is alive
DOUGLAS STUART, Booker Prize-winning author of Shuggie Bain and Young Mungo (on Trainspotting)
The voice of punk, grown up, grown wiser and grown eloquent
Sunday Times (on Trainspotting)
So propulsive...about as much fun as you can have between two book covers
The Times (on Dead Men's Trousers)
The arrival of Trainspotting was an earth-shaking cultural moment and it had a huge influence on me… It shines with humour and friendship. Every character here is alive
DOUGLAS STUART, Booker Prize-winning author of Shuggie Bain and Young Mungo (on Trainspotting)
The voice of punk, grown up, grown wiser and grown eloquent
Sunday Times (on Trainspotting)
So propulsive...about as much fun as you can have between two book covers
The Times (on Dead Men's Trousers)
