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  • Published: 1 October 2010
  • ISBN: 9781409078739
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 288

Reheated Cabbage




Hilarious, shocking and hugely entertaining, Reheated Cabbage has all the classic Irvine Welsh ingredients.

Hilarious, shocking and hugely entertaining, Reheated Cabbage has all the classic Irvine Welsh ingredients

In Reheated Cabbage you can enjoy Christmas dinner with Begbie and discover how aliens addicted to Embassy Regal have Midlothian under surveillance. You will meet a husband who values a televised Hibs v Hearts game more than his wife's life and see two guys fighting over a beautiful girl agree - after a few pills and pints of lager - that their friendship is actually more important. And you will be delighted to welcome back 'Juice' Terry Lawson, and to watch what happens when he meets his old nemesis under the strobe-lights of a Miami Beach nightclub.

'The stories combine sly humour with the tang of lived experience. It makes for a terrific collection, showcasing a writer who...has blossomed into one of the most distinctive, and distinguished, observers of British life' Sunday Telegraph

  • Published: 1 October 2010
  • ISBN: 9781409078739
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 288

About the author

Irvine Welsh

Irvine Welsh is the author of eleven previous novels and four books of shorter fiction. He currently lives in Chicago.

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Praise for Reheated Cabbage

A total hoot to read. The first thing that strikes you about much of the material here is the amazing energy of Welsh's writing

Independent on Sunday

All the elements of Welsh's best work remain in tact here: the brilliant imagination, the phonetically-transcribed Scots dialect, the humour, the gritty realism

Woman's Way

An enjoyable Welsh outing, by turns brutish and funny

Adrian Turpin, Financial Times

As you would expect, the stories in this collection involve a certain amount of cultural tourism to the lower depths, undertaken with black humour... Welsh's relish for degradation covers up a strong sentimental streak

Victor Sebestyen, Sunday Times

Brilliantly ghastly

Stuart Kelly, Scotland on Sunday

Customary wit, flair and energy

WBQ

Full of fun, frenzy and filth

Sebastian Shakespeare, Tatler

His customary strengths are in place. The stories are very funny in their black, often cartoonish way. There's also a degree of zest to the storytelling

James Walton, Daily Telegraph

It's good to be brought back to Welsh's original hellfire

Observer

The stories combine sly humour with the tang of lived experience. It makes for a terrific collection, showcasing a writer who...has blossomed into one of the most distinctive, and distinguished, observers of British life

Sunday Telegraph

Welsh's transcription of Scots dialect is brilliant... Welsh also has a fabulous sense of the absurd... The overall vibe of these stories is dark and grim. And fierily, fiercely funny

Brandon Robshaw, Independent on Sunday

Welsh's work remains at once moving, repellent and worryingly funny

TLS

What's striking about these early stories is that the thicker Welsh was steeped in the primordial goo of his Edinburgh Scots phonetics, the better the storytelling got

Alexander Linklater, Observer