Teddy Jamieson

Senior Features Writer

Born in Germany, raised in Northern Ireland, resident in Scotland more or less since 1982.  Fond of tea, Tottenham Hotspur and Touch of Evil. I’ve written one book (Whose Side Are You On?, Yellow Jersey, 2011), and interviewed Tracey Emin twice.   Hopefully no one holds either against me.

Born in Germany, raised in Northern Ireland, resident in Scotland more or less since 1982.  Fond of tea, Tottenham Hotspur and Touch of Evil. I’ve written one book (Whose Side Are You On?, Yellow Jersey, 2011), and interviewed Tracey Emin twice.   Hopefully no one holds either against me.

Latest articles from Teddy Jamieson

10 Scottish comic book creators who changed my world

There is an argument to be made that comic books started in Scotland. “Possibly the earliest comic paper was The Glasgow Looking Glass,” notes David Roach in his mammoth survey of British comic books, Masters of British Comic Art (Rebellion, 2020). A tabloid-sized newspaper that mixed up illustrations, humorous text and comic strips, The Glasgow Looking Glass published some 19 issues in 1825 and 1826.

RECOMMENDED The most entertaining biography since Taylor and Burton memoir: 10 books to read next

The most entertaining biography since Roger Lewis’s Taylor and Burton memoir Erotic Vagrancy? Quite possibly. I certainly don’t think I have enjoyed any book this year as much as Anouk’s joint memoir of Los Angeles writers Joan Didion and Eve Babitz. It’s a gossipy, shocking, intimate, very funny and always smart take on the two writers. A very revealing one too. I wasn’t expecting to learn quite so much about Joan Didion’s sex life.

REVIEW 'It's going to be very strange not to be on the wireless any more'

I've just added a bit more and made a couple of corrs so best use this version: It can be a difficult thing, saying goodbye. It can be a challenge to get the tone right, making sure you’re not too sentimental, that you don’t stray into mawkish, while still sounding sincere. Perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise that, after 58 years on the radio, Johnnie Walker did it perfectly on Sunday afternoon when he signed off for the last time at the end of Radio 2’s Sounds of the Seventies.