The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
Swan Songs
Lee Scott
Repeater £10.99
THERE aren’t enough novels about work – despite it taking up so much time, of each day, of each life.
Lee Scott’s debut novel Swan Songs is about working in a Big Pharma factory where a mysterious chemical solution is transferred into vials that are packed and then dispatched.
Our hero and narrator, Leonard Swanson, has been compelled by the Job Centre in Churchtown (a simulacrum for Scott’s native Runcorn) to take on shifts as a line-picker. His job is menial in the extreme, but also soul-destroying because Leonard is an aspiring rap legend and would much prefer to be at home working on “the best album ever” – the Swan Songs of the title.
CHRIS MOSS joins the hunt in Argentina for the works of Poland’s most enigmatic exile
ALAN MORRISON recommends a consummate, heart-warming collection about a working-class upbringing in the industrial north-east
GORDON PARSONS is intrigued by a biography of the Marxist intellectual and author, made from the point of view of his son
SYLVIA HIKINS relishes Jeanette Winterson’s brilliant hijack of 1001 Nights to push aside the boundaries set by others


