Distinguished by irony, compassion and the author's own dry wit, these
three novels paint a memorable picture of life in the streets, schools
and tenements of Glasgow in the 1950s and 60s.
With a unique vision of loneliness, old age, sexual longing, hot young
blood and youth's casual cruelty, George Friel's books explore a dark
comedy of tangled communication, human need and fading community.
All these elements come together in the humorous parable of greed,
religion and slum youth that is The Boy Who Wanted Peace; in the fate of
old and disturbed Miss Partridge who is obsessed with the innocence of
young Grace; and in the mental collapse of Mr Alfred, a middle-aged
schoolteacher who is in love with one of this pupils. The humour,
realism and moral concern of Friel's work clearly anticipate and stand
alongside the novels of Alan Spence, Alasdair Gray, William McIlvanney
and James Kelman.