Will Self
Celebrated author of novels, short stories and non-fiction, Will Self contributes to many publications and regularly appears on radio and television. Fifty of his PsychoGeograpghy columns from The Independent have recently been collected in a new publication featuring art by Ralph Steadman.
PsychoGeography: Journey's end
In Ibiza the night proceeds according to plan: we set off in convoy, several cars full of us. True, we're going to a party in a swanky villa on the other side of the island, but while half our company are teenaged, the rest of us are past the age when we can do any raving – except against the dying of the light. Then: solid darkness, with headlights gouging it out to expose switchback roads and useless signs. The mobile phone calls begin: like the echo location of decadent bats. Some Ibizan parties can be found by following lizards stencilled on walls, others by pink balloons, but the turning for this one – or so we're assured through the ether – will be clear to us because of a strategically placed pile of three white phones.
Recently by Will Self
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Saturday, 27 September 2008
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Saturday, 20 September 2008
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Will Self: A seer in Provence
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PsychoGeography: The upland villages of Provence all look like mini collapsed towers of Babel
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Saturday, 30 August 2008
PsychoGeography: "See there, I reckon that'll be next to go, bit in 't middle went a few days ago."
Will Self: Slip slidin’away
Saturday, 23 August 2008
PsychoGeography: Beyond Bridlington things got – as Alice would say – curiouser and curiouser
Will Self: Some like it hot
Saturday, 16 August 2008
PsychoGeography: 'I’ve been pummelled in hammams from Fez to Cappadocia, emerging feeling like pizza dough'
Columnist Comments
• Andrew Grice: The Chancellor must consider tax hikes.
Despite the weight on his shoulders, the Chancellor remains remarkably calm.
• Howard Jacobson: The lesson of Hitler's deformity.
So Hitler actually did have only one ball. I call that a pity for history.
• Deborah Orr: Praising the public on pointless decisions.
People power, as it pertains to television anyway, is proving to be a tricky beast.
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1 Kabul 30 years ago, and Kabul today. Have we learned nothing?
2 Howard Jacobson: Read more literature and less history. That's the lesson of Hitler's deformity
3 Deborah Orr: For most women, prostitution is not a life choice
4 Leading article: The BBC still does not understand
5 Andrew Grice: A cool Chancellor must consider putting up taxes
6 Leading article: The overwhelming case for a major economic package
7 Robert Skidelsky: What would Keynes have done?
8 Ian Burrell: I doubt the head of compliance finds this prank so 'hilarious' now
9 Leading article: Better education can help to make our roads safer



