The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs

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The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs
Author Irvine Welsh
Country Scotland
Language English, Scots
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Jonathan Cape
Released 2006
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 392 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-224-07587-X

The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs is the sixth novel by Scottish writer Irvine Welsh.

It has been compared with Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray and Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

[edit] Plot summary

Danny Skinner and Brian Kibby both work for Edinburgh's restaurant-inspection team as environmental health officers. Skinner is a hard-drinking man, who relaxes by reading Hugh MacDiarmid, Rimbaud, and Verlaine, and watching Federico Fellini films. Kibby is shy and inward-looking, and drinks Horlicks, collects model trains, and obsessively plays a computer game called Harvest Moon. Kibby's social life revolves around a hillwalking group called the Hyp Hykers and attendance at Star Trek conventions.

The plot revolves around Skinner's relationship with alcohol and his search for his unknown father. His alcoholism causes him to lose his girlfriend Kay. At the same time, he is reading a book by Edinburgh chef Alan de Freitas called The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs. He is involved in football hooliganism and supports local team Hibernian F.C. He conceives a strong dislike for Kibby and bullies and undermines him mercilessly at work.

Gradually it dawns on Skinner that the damage that ought to accrue to his body through his lifestyle is instead inflicted on Kibby. For a while he enjoys this, particularly relishing his promotion at work, but when Kibby becomes mortally ill he realises that he needs him. When Kibby comes out of hospital after a liver transplant (caused vicariously by Skinner's heavy drinking), they both realise that the relationship works both ways.

Kibby (who has retired from his job on health grounds) puts on weight and becomes a heavy drinker in his own right. Skinner resigns from the job and goes to San Francisco in search of someone who might be his father. He is disappointed in this as it turns out the man was exclusively homosexual during the period in question, but does find love at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, in the shape of American Dorothy Cominsky.

Skinner returns to Leith where he continues the search for his father and starts a relationship with Kibby's sister. When he discovers de Freitas having sex with Kay, he tries to kill them both, only managing to kill the chef and gravely injure his ex-girlfriend. By the end of the story Skinner knows with reasonable certainty, as he dies at Kibby's hand, who his father was.

[edit] Themes

The book marks a departure for Welsh in that (although ecstasy, cannabis and cocaine are mentioned in passing), there is little reference to the dance club scene of most of his other work. On the contrary, it is alcohol abuse which punctuates the novel, along with the themes of personal identity (touched upon in Marabou Stork Nightmares) and romantic love (The Undefeated, from Ecstasy).

The story is told against the backdrop of the 2004 US elections and the war in Iraq.

Skinner's mother is a former punk fan, and although the question of her son's paternity is as good as answered by the end of the book, there is a remaining hint that Joe Strummer, the late Clash singer, could also have been a possible candidate.

[edit] External links

Irvine Welsh books
Trainspotting | The Acid House | Marabou Stork Nightmares | Ecstasy | Filth | Glue | Porno |The Bedroom Secrets of the Master Chefs