Wels buy Ecstasy
Wels buy EcstasyWels buy Ecstasy
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Wels buy Ecstasy
Jump to ratings and reviews. Want to read. Rate this book. Loading interface About the author. Irvine Welsh books 7, followers. Probably most famous for his gritty depiction of a gang of Scottish Heroin addicts, Trainspotting , Welsh focuses on the darker side of human nature and drug use. All of his novels are set in his native Scotland and filled with anti-heroes, small time crooks and hooligans. Welsh manages, however to imbue these characters with a sad humanity that makes them likable despite their obvious scumbaggerry. Irvine Welsh is also known for writing in his native Edinburgh Scots dialect, making his prose challenging for the average reader unfamiliar with this style. Write a Review. Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book! Community Reviews. Search review text. Displaying 1 - 30 of reviews. You all know how I feel about Welsh. His crass, brazen stories filled with shock, drugs, and all kinds of abuse, absolutely thrill and delight me. Every new release of his I will devour rather than savour, subsequently churning out reviews filled with crazed praise and fangirl ramblings. This time I decided to go back to his earlier work and treat myself to something more raw and rough. Ecstasy is comprised of three short stories, all in relation to chemical romances and relationships. This is the only vein running through the three; they are incredibly unlike each other, and all brought something original to the table. There's a certain feel to Welsh short stories which is far lighter and less fucked up than his novels. They're nice for a quick injection, and something to go to when you're not quite in the mood to have your heed blown off your shoulders into pitch black darkness. Although Ecstasy gives us amongst other things Austen-esque pornography, beastiality, necrophilia, deformity, and child dismemberment, we end on an ecstasy high of two people falling in love. And despite me relishing the necrophilia more particularly, love is what it's all about. You're uncomfortable, it's grim, some of the plot twists and situations will either give you a mindfuck or the boke, but it's so good. If you're too lazy to read and interpret Scot's dialect, you are an arsehole and you have my pity. Although I wouldn't recommend this as a starting point for Welsh beginners, it's twisted, it's clatty as fuck, and it's the boy's true early stuff. Canny beat it. Makis Dionis. I really enjoyed the first two stories in this collection, but wasn't such a fan of the third. Which is a shame, as that was the longest. Overall though I can say I did like it more than Trainspotting , which I found good but quite painful to read. Anyway: I definitely recommend the first two stories. Obese romance author Rebecca is sneaking chocolates whilst watching her dick of a husband, Perky, in the garden when she suffers a stroke. Criminal and druggie Dave experiences love for the first time when he meets the armless Samantha - armless due to a pregnancy drug, Tenazadrine, given to her mother during her pregnancy and marketed to her by a few specific businessmen - men who Samantha, with Dave's help, is not ready to forgive or forget about Lloyd is a drug dealer and user going about his business with his druggie mates whilst starting to realise that he's getting older and has never really experienced love. Heather is unhappily married and unhappy with her life, desperately hoping for change when, on a night out with her friend, she tries E for the first time. Really disturbing, but I remember this as a great read nonetheless. Welsh has the ability to make the hair stand up on the back of your neck with deceptively simple descriptions of wholly credible human callousness and abuse, peppered with characters that you know you met at some party or other, late one night Hideous but awesome in equal quantities. I really enjoyed his writing style. Richard English. Dirty, disgusting, and disturbingly amusing. By far, the most twisted book I've ever read. Nick Davies. Three stories - the first two of which were brilliant, the last a bit long and pointless though not without charm - which properly illustrate Welsh at his best. Witty, shocking, touching in places.. Despite never having really been part of any of the 'scenes' touched on in depth in these stories, I did however gain a lot of pleasure from remembering younger and more carefree times in my youth. God I love how this man writes. I'm mean he's funny and he's clever but it's the romantic in him that I love. His ability to find the beauty in the warts and all. I'd heard this collection of 'three tales of chemical imbalance' weren't so good, so it was a pleasant surprise to find myself quite enjoying them all. Within each of the three 'stories' there are multiple plot lines running with entertaining characters abounding. I found the combination very pleasing, although others might find it a bit forced perhaps even cheezy. What is lacking is the dense dialect of Trainspotting which might make it more accessible reading for some. Metodi Markov. Ecstasy is a collection of three short love stories by Irvine Welsh. Not love stories in the classical sense, more love stories for the modern, ecstasy fuelled, party age. The kind of love stories where the characters are heavily flawed and you aren't sure if their love will last, or even if they were really in love to begin with. The first story, Lorraine Goes to Livingston, was my least favourite of the stories. I found Freddy Royle, television personality, necrophile and all round shit-bag was a little too over the top, even by Welsh's standards. The other characters are more believable, putting up with each other and just trying to get by. The story centres on a romance the classic kind writer, Rebecca, and a nurse she meets after being admitted to hospital. The pair develop an odd friendship, with overtures of obsession. The story stops a bit too abruptly, I was just starting to get into it when it quickly wrapped into a unsatisfying conclusion. The second story, Fortune's Always Hiding, is about a girl afflicted with severe birth defects caused by a Thalidomide like drug her mother took. Samantha meets Dave, a hooligan, thug and burglar by trade at a party. They bond over her passion for revenge against the corporate suits who marketed the drug knowing its side effects and his passion for wanton violence. The parts from Dave's perspective are Welsh doing what he does best: writing a complete asshole, while making them believable and even managing to make you sympathise with them. Dave is a horrible person, violent, misogynistic, and a thief, but he has his own moral compass. He'll defend his friends and family, but in his own way. Samantha is a bit less fleshed out. Outwardly she's tough as nails, never letting her disabilities hold her back, but she is bent on revenge and uses Dave as means to it. The final story, The Undefeated, I think is the best of the bunch. The story alternates between chapters by Lloyd and Heather. Lloyd is a 30 something, trying to live like a 20 something. He downs drugs every weekend with a group of people he can barely relate to while sober. His excessive life style hides his underlying desires to meet someone he can have a real relationship with. Heather is his opposite, a straight laced woman stuck in a loveless, sexless marriage to a man she met a university. Her life is a dull routine of dinner parties, contrived political discussions, and sexism. Heather laments that she married too early and longs for some excitement in her life. The back and forth of their stories propels them towards each other. I think Welsh's writing really shines with the juxtaposition of Lloyd and Heather's chapters. In particular Heather as the housewife battling constant belittlement and her push to break out of a life of boredom. I love Irvine Welsh. I start every review on here of one of his books with that because I think it'll be very difficult for me to ever be too critical of his work. This is no real departure from what I've known to love but I still lapped it up. The first story of the three is slightly more bizarre than I've come to expect but still entertaining. The second was an ideal example of the short-story format, yet scarificed none of Welsh's 'everyday' life characterisation - it was utterly depraved, which is exactly what I love about his stories! The third and final story was a lot longer and probably the 'main' tale. I felt it had plenty of scope to be a full-blown novel but it, again was excellent at what it did. The fact of the matter is that 'Ecstasy' gives off a totally different vibe to Trainspotting et. Many will fail to grasp the different and deride it as the same old filth, but immerse yourself in it and you'll find it a lot more charming and a lot less desperate to his other works. Very worthwhile reading. The first 2 stories were incredibly gripping and disturbing - in other words brilliant. Tale no. To make matters worse, a film was made based solely on the 3rd tale Maybe after watching Trainspotting, The Acid House and Filth my standards were too high - but there it is. As far as the book goes I would still recommend it. Rafo Zarbabyan. Author 6 books followers. Welsh excels at that kind of Clockwork-Orangian art of endearing the reader to shitty people. In these three stories--all loosely bound together only by the characters' frequent use of the titular drug--we meet an obese romance writer and her filthy husband, a soccer hooligan seduced by an armless woman to viciously murder the people who made the drug that made her born armless, and two sad-sack fucks who fall in love or do they? The blurb is misleading, somehow, so ignore it. The stories are much more loosely packed and episodic than that would suggest, which is part of what I love about Welsh so much: the punch, gutterfuck, quality of his mad-dash, almost ADHD storytelling. It's like Beowulf on meth. Grendel is banality. Typical Welsh fun, 3 stories Jillian Brandon. Super weird but really interesting. Olena Benkovska. The first one was sick and twisted and made me laugh, the second one made me cringe a bit and feel slightly depressed, and the last one I thought was a very sweet love story. This book has a LOT of foul language, so enter at your own risk. You know, I am finding it difficult to express my opinion about IW's brill writing without the use of expletives. This is not the type of book I would normally read, but the bold, ballsy cover art seduced me and I was hooked. Before 'Ecstasy' I'd never read an Irvine Welsh book but had flirted with the idea for a number of years. Considering the number of successful film adaptations his novels have spawned think Danny Boyle's 'Trainspotting' or most recently 'Filth' I didn't doubt Welsh's talent but more the confrontational nature of his graphic and typically grotesque subject matter. With this book however, I actually enjoyed basking in the filth with his hapless, selfish stoned protagonists, and although I never rooted for any one character, I did pity many of them, thus eliciting some sort of necessary empathy to justify reading on. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I would be reading - and almost enjoying - stories of illicit drugs, explicit and unsatisfactory sex, masturbation, bestiality, necrophilia, rape, disability, mutilation, thuggery and divorce. Welsh's voice is commendably unapologetic, and once I got my head around the intensely Scottish pronunciations think J. Rowling's Hagrid dialogue on steroids I settled into the disgusting world of his characters with morbid fascination and awe. This trilogy of drug-fuelled romance is so well written. The tone is honest, bold and urgent, and like a good, hearty slap to the face, necessary. I stepped outside of my comfort zone with this novel and I'm so glad I did. Once you get over the initial shock of it all and try to shake off the guilty feeling you have while reading it like you're watching pornography or something let the eloquent and sophisticated writing style immerse you in the deliciously smutty world that is 'Ecstasy' And then have a cold shower! Sara Williams. It was the music I started listening to. It was the television I started watching. I found myself thinking again. I tried to stop because it was only causing pain. I couldn't. When all this is in your head it has to come out into your life. If it doesn't, you get crushed. I'm not going to get crushed. I purchased quite a few of his books for a very cheap price unfortunately the iconic Trainspotting wasn't on the list, neither was Filth but still, I decided to dive hard into this world of madness. Welsh's writing is very weird in all honesty, and his stories are taken to the absolute fucking ridiculous point and that is the funniest part of it all. In Ecstasy, we follow three different stories. The first follows Rebecca who is a successful writer after she almost colapses and finds out her beloved husband was trying to poison her. The second follows a woman who was given a drug that crippled her from birth trying to get revenge and lastly, we follow Heather who is unhappily married and looking for some new experiences. All of them have the E factor in them and my favourite part was undoubtly, Irvine's descriptions of the glamour or lack of the parties. Those were absolutely vivid in my mind. They're all little tales of empowerment and doubt, self love, self hate, and a lot of hard drugs. They were amusing to read, but nothing impressive at the end of the day. People say it's foul, interesting and exciting. It's not. I bought it years ago and picked it up because I finished a book I had on me, big mistake. Misogynistic boring nonsense, forcefully made to be more controversial but in style that reminds of a middle schooler. I managed to read a half and only skimmed the rest. It's not disturbing, it's cheap and lazy. You know how you look away when watching a gruesome movie to be spared the most horrible scene? Ever done that when reading a gruesome book? This book made me look away. And then, because you can't help it, you continue reading Victoria Unizhona. Kseniia Nosulenko. This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers. Show full review. More reviews and ratings. Join the discussion. Can't find what you're looking for? Help center.
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Wels buy Ecstasy
Elle Charity Yarn is here Click here for launch specials. Why pay shipping when you can get more books instead? Guaranteed Safe Checkout. Operating from three strategic depots in Gauteng, we diligently deliver hundreds of books weekly, illuminating minds and enriching souls and bringing the joy of reading to every corner of the nation. Our shelves boast roughly 10, books and 4, authors at any moment, with an additional , unlisted treasures available upon request. Can't find what you're looking for? Allow us the privilege to unearth it for you! At ReadMatter, a portion of every sale is lovingly donated to cherished causes—supporting the aged, the vulnerable, and animal conservation. Join us in turning pages and transforming lives, one story at a time. Click to enlarge Add to Wishlist Compare. All books are secondhand and in good condition unless otherwise stated in the description below. This product is currently out of stock and unavailable. These 'tales of ordinary madness' for an end of the century combine several kinds of addiction: love, revenge, drugs. We see disabled people set up a terrorist organization, an author of sentimental novels surrender to his penchant for pornography, and a couple of accident victims of life merge in absolute love. With these three 'chemical' romances, Irvine Welsh ventures into a dangerous zone, where reality only confirms our worst nightmares. Ecstasy Irvine Welsch R Open sidebar.
Wels buy Ecstasy
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Wels buy Ecstasy
Wels buy Ecstasy
Ecstasy Irvine Welsch
Wels buy Ecstasy
Wels buy Ecstasy
Wels buy Ecstasy
Wels buy Ecstasy