Glue is the story of four boys growing up in the Edinburgh schemes, & about the loyalties, the experiences
- & the secrets
- that hold them together into their thirties. Four boys becoming men: Juice Terry, the work-shy fanny-merchant, with corkscrew curls & sticky fingers; Billy the boxer: driven, controlled, playing to his strengths; Carl, the Milky Bar Kid, drifting along to his own soundtrack; & the doomed Gally
- who has one less skin than everyone else & seems to find catastrophe at every corner. As we follow their lives from the seventies into the new century
- from punk to techno, from speed to Es
- we can see each of them trying to struggle out from under the weight of the conditioning of class & culture, peer pressure & their parents' hopes that maybe their sons will do better than they did. What binds the four of them is the friendship formed by the scheme, their school, & their ambition to escape from both; their loyalty fused in street morality: back up your mates, don't hit women &, most importantly, never grass
- on anyone. Despite its scale & ambition, Glue has all Irvine Welsh's usual pace & vigour, crackling dialogue, scabrous set-pieces & black, black humour, but it is also a grown-up book about growing up
- about the way we live our lives, & what happens to us when things become unstuck.