Set amid the mass, temporary true-life migration to Manchester by thousands of Glasgow Rangers football club fans to watch the 2008 Uefa Cup final, Alan Bissett\'s latest novel arrives complete with a ringing endorsement from Irvine Welsh, once the most famous author in Scotland, who describes Pack Men as \"unique and special. I honestly haven\'t read anything as impressive as this from a Scottish writer in yonks.\" Such fulsome praise is designed to be deliberately eye-catching. Pack Men is, indeed, the sort of novel Welsh used to write (and write very well), full as it is with football, drugs, drink, music, and a firm grip on colloquial and (it\'s fair to say) colourful language. Sadly, the comparisons end there. Bissett\'s cast of characters are nowhere near as engaging as those Welsh used to muster so masterfully, and the incident the author plunders to provide the event at the novel\'s core - that midweek, high-profile football match in Manchester - is not of great historical import. That violence and redemption eventually arrive is, when they inevitably do, of no great concern either.
GMT 11:18 2017 Saturday ,04 November
Crime writer Ian Rankin predicts rise of 'kind and gentle' booksGMT 10:19 2017 Thursday ,12 October
British author Follett calls Brexit 'absolute disaster'GMT 11:35 2017 Friday ,29 September
Proust paid for good reviews of his masterpieceGMT 10:23 2017 Thursday ,14 September
Paul Auster tops shortlist for Man Booker prizeGMT 12:50 2017 Tuesday ,05 September
'Obscene' S. Korea novelist dead in suspected suicideGMT 12:39 2017 Tuesday ,06 June
Arundhati Roy releases first novel in 20 yearsGMT 20:44 2017 Friday ,21 April
SCRF reviews future of children’s illustration booksGMT 08:57 2017 Friday ,21 April
2 Israeli authors make Man Booker global shortlistMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©