Welsh, Irvine
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishWelsh, IrvineIrvine WelshWelsh, Ir‧vine /ˈɜːvɪn $ ˈɜːr-/ (1958–) a Scottish writer whose best-known novel, Trainspotting, was made into a successful film. The characters in Welsh’s novels are usually young and take drugs such as heroin and cocaine. Their lives are hard, but the stories are told with a lot of humour. Welsh has been called ‘the poet laureate of the chemical generation’, meaning that he is respected and liked by young people who drink and take drugs.