Colley is a "
Gonzo journalist" with an
amphetamine habit, living in Edinburgh. He also smokes cigarettes and
cannabis, drinks copious amounts of
alcohol, plays computer games, and has adventurous sex
with a married woman, Yvonne. He regrets his addictions and misdemeanours and occasionally tries (admittedly half-heartedly) to give them up. Furthermore, he reflects on his awful experience of witnessing the aftermath of the massacre at the '
Highway of Death' in the
Gulf War, and covers the deployment of
HMS Vanguard, Britain's first
Trident nuclear missile submarine. He thinks he has a
scoop when he receives anonymous phone calls about a series of mysterious deaths. Suddenly he has mysterious deaths of his own to worry about, when an
editorial he wrote years before comes back to haunt him. In it, he suggested that certain named capitalist and
right-wing public figures would be better hate-figures than the conventional ones of foreign leaders or domestic criminals. It seems someone is killing off the people on his list, one by one. The description of the murders (which are ingeniously sadistic) is done in a fairly detailed manner. Under suspicion by the police, Colley finds himself involved doubly in the bizarre murders when the killer is revealed. At the end of the book, Colley is diagnosed with
lung cancer (a downbeat ending omitted in the
film adaptation). ==Literary significance and criticism==