
Author: Ennis, Stewart, Authors, Various
Fiction & related items
Published on 1 January 1800 by Vagabond Voices.
Paperback | 170 pages
142 x 210 x 21 | 208g
From the inmates of Shotts prison, an accretion of voices not unlike the sounds erupting from the fiddles, flutes and guitarsof musicians you might find playing in a Glasgow bar, only these disparate voices are not musical. Instead, a finely tuned arrayof words expressing thoughts and emotions procured from their writers' time in prison: 'Porridge, a breakfast people make in pots./ But I'm doing porridge here in SHOTTS.' In one of the prose pieces, a grandfather pretends to his visiting grandson that he's a secret agent on his final mission signalling to the reader his retirement from crime; in another, there is the ongoing concern for an elderly father at home with senile dementia: '... he's ducking behind the curtain ... I don't know if I can cope with this today.' Haiku and longer poetic forms capture the interminable frustration of being inside and the effect this has on the human psyche: 'Go off the rails/End up in the cells/Apply for bail/Application fail// Back to jail/howl and wail.' One reflection on the emotional difficulty of being transgender in a system that does little to offer support adds poignancy to an anthology that is already thrumming with humour and attitude.