Description
A last-chance winter road trip for a Scottish band spirals into wild chaos – seagull massacres, bomb tests, and darkly funny rock’n’roll madness on the edge. A raw, darkly funny novel by one of Scotland’s finest authors – newly reissued!
ANNIVERSARY EDITION with an INTRODUCTION BY VAL McDERMID
‘A drug-fuelled, counterclockwise state-of-the-nation rock ‘n’ roll tour captures where we were at better than any modern novel I’ve read’ – Irvine Welsh
‘A powerful and moving commentary on the country and its defining myths’ – Ian Rankin
‘One of the most vital books about modern Scotland – our landscape, culture, identity, myths and lies – of the twenty-first century. And despite the dinge, debauchery and danger, it’s still a joy to tour with the band’ – Callum McSorley
‘Packed with seedy, sticky bars, sullen punters and morose reflections in deteriorating weather, there is an atmospheric beauty to The Ossians‘ – Independent on Sunday
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Connor is twenty-four: brilliant, broken, and out of control. He’s the swaggering frontman of The Ossians, a Scottish indie band on the brink of signing a major record deal.
Desperate to make their mark, they set off on a two-week winter tour across Scotland’s cities and hinterlands – a last-ditch attempt to find fame, purpose, and themselves.
But the tour soon spirals into a surreal, chaotic odyssey. From seedy bars and snowbound towns to a final, defining Glasgow gig, the band hurtles through a whirlwind of seagull massacres, botched drug deals, a mysterious stalker, radioactive beaches, bomb-testing ranges, epileptic fits, riotous Russian submariners, deadly storms, epiphanies, regular beatings and random shootings.
Raw, darkly funny and wild with energy, The Ossians is a gloriously anarchic story of rock’n’roll obsession, national identity and self-destruction – and what it means to belong: in a band, in a country, in a life unravelling at speed.
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‘The authentic ring of a man who’s been there’ – Guardian
‘Johnstone is good at describing the excitement, boredom, sniping and bonhomie of a touring band at the transit-van end of the career arc’ – The Times
‘A blast’ – Scotland on Sunday
‘So exhilaratingly authentic, you can hear the chords and smell the vomit’ – Christopher Brookmyre
‘A gripping, compelling road trip around modern Scotland’ – Niall Griffiths
‘This is This Is Spinal Tap for Scotland’s lost generation. Johnstone has taken a small story of a small band lost in a small country and created an epic’ – Ewan Morrison
‘Entertains in the uncharted corners of an unseen Scotland’ – List
Praise for Doug Johnstone
‘Tense, funny and deeply moving’ – Mark Billingham
‘Nobody portrays modern Edinburgh better than Doug Johnstone ? speaks volumes about the power of story’ – Val McDermid
‘An engrossing and beautifully written tale that bears all the Doug Johnstone hallmarks in its warmth and darkly comic undertones’ – Herald Scotland
‘Wonderful characters: flawed, funny and brave’ – Sunday Times
‘Gripping and blackly humorous’ – Observer
‘A must for those seeking strong, authentic, intelligent female protagonists’ – Publishers Weekly
‘This enjoyable mystery is also a touching and often funny portrayal of grief … more, please’ – Guardian
‘Some of the most unique characters in crime fiction’ – Daily Express
‘Underlines just how accomplished Johnstone has become’ – Daily Mail

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