322- ] English Literature
Alasdair Gray
Scottish
novelist, playwright, and artist
Alasdair Gray (born
December 28, 1934, East Glasgow, Scotland—died December 29, 2019, Glasgow) was
a Scottish novelist, playwright, and artist best known for his surreal atmospheric
novel Lanark (1981).
Gray’s family was
evacuated from Glasgow during World War II. He later returned to attend
Whitehill Senior Secondary School, where he wrote and drew for the school
magazine, and the Glasgow School of Art. He went on to work as a muralist and a
scene painter for local theatres. Throughout the 1960s and ’70s he also wrote
plays for television, radio, and the stage, all the while working on a novel
that would be decades in the making. When he finally published Lanark, his
first book, it was hailed as a landmark of Scottish literature.
Subsequent fiction
included 1982, Janine (1984), The Fall of Kelvin Walker (1985), Poor Things
(1992), A History Maker (1994), and Old Men in Love: John Tunnock’s Posthumous
Papers (2007). His short fiction was collected as Unlikely Stories, Mostly
(1983), Ten Tales Tall & True (1993), and The Ends of Our Tethers: 13 Sorry
Stories (2003). Every Short Story, 1951–2012 was published in 2012.
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