William McIlvanney (25 November 1936 – 5 December 2015) wis a Scots novelist, short story scriever, an makar.[1] He wis kent as Gus by friends and acquaintances.[2] McIlvanney wis a champion o gritty yet poetic leiteratur; his warks Laidlaw, The Papers of Tony Veitch, an Walking Wounded is aa weel-kent for their shawin o Glesga in the 1970s. He is regairdit as "the faither o Tartan Noir" an as Scotland's Camus.
McIlvanney wis born in Kilmarnock on 25 November 1936, the youngest o fower bairns o an umwhile miner, an went tae Kilmarnock Academy.[3] He went on tae study Inglis at Glesga University an graduatit wi ae MA in 1960.[1] McIlvanney then wirkit as ae Inglis dominie til 1975, whan he quit as assistant heiddominie at Greenwood Academy tae mak forrit wi his writin career.[1] His aulder brither wis the sports jurnalist Hugh McIlvanney.[1] His son, Liam McIlvanney, is a crime writer as weel.[4]
As weel as his leiteratur, McIlvanney wrate on a reglar basis for newspapers, an wis a writer an narrator o the BBC Scotland fitba documentary Only a Game? in 1986.[5][6]
McIlvanney haudit ontae his strang socialist views ootthrouh his life. Lik ithers fae his backgrund in Scotland, he wis strangly agin Thatcherism. Later he becam disappyntit bi the shift o Labour unner Tony Blair an bi 2014 he felt, hesitantly, that Scottish independence micht be the best poleitical solution.[7]
William McIlvanney deet on 5 December 2015 aged 79, efter a wee spell o illness.[8] On hearin o his daith, sindry public figures, siclik Nicola Sturgeon, Ian Rankin and Irvine Welsh, gied mense notin baith his inspirational writin and his likeable an gentlemanly personality.[9][10] The Telegraph's obituary wrate: "Many authors are admired. Many are respected. Few are loved as he was, for what they are as well as for what they have written."[10]
His first buik, Remedy is None, wis furthset in 1966[11] an won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize in 1967.[12]Docherty (1975), anent ae miner that's courage an endurance is pit tae the test durin the depression, won the Whitbread Novel Award.[13]
The Big Man (1985) is the story o Dan Scoular, an unemployed man that turns tae bare-knuckle fechtin tae mak thrift. Baith nuvels hae typical McIlvanney chairacters – teucht, aft violent, men lockit in a fecht wi their ain nature an upbringin.[14] The nuvel wis turnt intae ae film in 1990 directit by David Leland, starrin Liam Neeson, an kythin Billy Connolly.[15]
His novel, The Kiln (1996) won the Saltire Society Scottish Book of the Year Award.[16]
Gifford, Douglas (1976), review of Docherty, in Burnett, Ray (ed.), Calgagus No. 3, pp. 58 & 59, ISSN0307-2029
Aitchison, James (1983), review of The Papers of Tony Veitch, in Lindsay, Maurice (ed.), The Scottish Review: Arts and Environment 31, August 1983, pp. 60 – 62, ISSN0140-0894
↑Morton, Brian (27 September 1990). "Glasgow no mean Hamlet". The Times.
↑ abTaylor, D. J. (28 Januar 1989). "Fist-fights and metaphors from Kilmarnock: D J Taylor on William McIlvaney, a Scottish storyteller launching guerrilla attacks from the front line". The Independent.
↑Williams, John (3 September 1991). "Jack of all genres, master of one – William McIlvanney's new detective novel continues his seamless document of Scotland". The Guardian.
↑Bailey, Hilary (5 September 1985). "A matter of manner/ Review of new fiction". The Guardian.
↑Brown, Geoff (21 August 1990). "Youth hogs the old spotlight". The Times.
↑ abCochrane, Lynn (28 November 1996). "The Kiln is named book of the year". The Scotsman.Cochrane, Lynn (28 November 1996). "The Kiln is named book of the year". The Scotsman.
↑Dening, Penelope (1 October 1996). "Honour in his own country". The Irish Times.
[1]Archived 2015-12-15 at the Wayback Machine McLuckie, Craig. "Researching McIlvanney. A Critical and Bibliographic Introduction", Scottish Studies International 28 (Scottish Studies Centre of the Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz in Germersheim), 1999.
[2]Archived 2012-04-14 at the Wayback Machine McLuckie, Craig. "Postcolonial Resistance: Class, Gender and Race in McIlvanney's The Big Man," Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses (RCEI) 2002; 45: 151–67.
[3]Archived 2012-04-14 at the Wayback Machine McLuckie, Craig. "William McIlvanney and the Provocative Witness: Resistance in the 'Laidlaw' Trilogy," Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses (RCEI) 2000 Nov; 41: 87-101.