Don Paterson is one of our most acclaimed contemporary poets, possessed
of "an infinite sensitivity to the world" (Zadie Smith). But his current
standing gives few hints of his hilariously misspent youth. An
indifferent student prone to obsessions (with girls at school and . . .
origami), Paterson nevertheless made clear early on his immense gift for
observation. In Toy Fights, he vividly re-creates the customs of the
Scottish working class, from the titular childhood game ("basically
twenty minutes of extreme violence without pretext") to the virtues of
the sugary sweet known as tablet. When American pop culture arrived,
Paterson fell hard for the so-called outlaw sound; by his teens, he was
traveling with his father, a Stetson-wearing "country" musician, and
becoming guitar-mad himself. A memoir of family, music, and highly
inventive profanity, Toy Fights is an unforgettable account of the
years we all spend in rehearsal for real life.