Alasdair Gray is Scotland's best known polymath. Born 1934 in
Glasgow, he graduated in design and mural art from Glasgow School of Art
in 1957. After decades of surviving by painting and writing TV and radio
plays, his first novel, the loosely autobiographical, blackly fantastic
Lanark, opened up new imaginative territory for such varied writers as
Jonathan Coe, A.L. Kennedy, James Kelman, Janice Galloway and Irvine
Welsh. It led Anthony Burgess to call him 'the most important Scottish
writer since Sir Walter Scott'. His other published books include 1982
Janine, Poor Things (winner of the Whitbread Award), The Book of
Prefaces, The Ends of our Tethers and Old Men in Love. In this book,
with reproductions of his murals, portraits, landscapes and
illustrations, Gray tells of his failures and successes which have led
his pictures to be accepted by a new generation of visual artists.