Alasdair Gray
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Life
Gray was born in Riddrie, east Glasgow. His father had been wounded in the First World War and worked at the time in a factory, while his mother worked in a shop. During the Second World War, Gray was evacuated to Perthshire and then Lanarkshire, experiences which he drew on in his later fiction. The family lived on a council estate, and Gray received his education from a combination of state education, public libraries and public service broadcasting: "the kind of education British governments now consider useless, especially for British working class children", as he later commented. He studied at Glasgow School of Art from 1952 to 1957, and taught there from 1958 to 1962. It was as a student that he first began what would become the novel Lanark.
After graduation, Gray worked as a scene and portrait painter, as well as an independent artist and writer. His first plays were broadcast on radio and television in 1968. Between 1972 and 1974 he participated in a writing group organised by Philip Hobsbaum, where he met James Kelman, Liz Lochhead and Tom Leonard.
Gray illustrates his books himself, and has produced many murals as well as paintings.
In 2001 he stood as the candidate of the Glasgow University Scottish Nationalist Association for the post of Rector of the University of Glasgow, but was eventually narrowly defeated by Greg Hemphill.
He has been married twice: firstly to Inge Sorenson (1961-1970), and since 1991 to Morag McAlpine. He has one son, Andrew, born in 1964. He still lives in Glasgow.
Quotes
- "It is plain that the vaster the social unit, the less possible is true democracy." Lanark, p.289
- "Who did the council fight?"
- "It split in two and fought itself."
- "That's suicide!"
- "No, ordinary behaviour. The efficient half eats the less efficient half and grows stronger. War is just a violent way of doing what half the people do calmly in peacetime: using the other half for food, heat, machinery and sexual pleasure. Man is the pie that bakes and eats himself, and the recipe is separation."
- "I refuse to believe men kill each other just to make their enemies rich."
- "How can men recognize their real enemies when their family, schools and work teach them to struggle with each other and to believe law and decency come from the teachers?"
- "My son won't be taught that," said Lanark firmly.
- "You have a son?"
- "Not yet." Lanark, p.411
Bibliography
Novels
- Lanark (1981)
- 1982, Janine (1984)
- The Fall of Kelvin Walker (1985)
- McGrotty and Ludmilla (1989)
- Something Leather (1990)
- Poor Things (1992)
- A History Maker (1994)
- Mavis Belfrage (1996)
Short stories
- Lean Tales (1985) (with James Kelman and Agnes Owens)
- Unlikely Stories, Mostly (1983)
- Ten Tales Tall & True (1993)
- Mavis Belfrage (1996)
- The Ends of Our Tethers (2003)
Poetry
- Old Negatives (1989)
- Sixteen Occasional Poems (2000)
Non-fiction
- Why Scots Should Rule Scotland (1992; revised 1997)
- The Book of Prefaces (2000)
- Alasdair Gray: Critical Appreciations and a Bibliography (2001; includes contributions by Gray himself.)
External links
- Official website (http://www.alasdairgray.co.uk/)
- Contemporary Writers entry (http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth43&state=index=g)
- Open Directory entry (http://www.dmoz.org/Arts/Literature/Authors/G/Gray,_Alasdair/)