How Late It Was, How Late

James Kelman
3.6
4,634 ratings 396 reviews
Winner of the Booker Prize: "A work of marvelous vibrance and richness of character."-- New York Times Book Review One Sunday morning in Glasgow, shoplifting ex-con Sammy awakens in an alley, wearing another man's shoes and trying to remember his two-day drinking binge. He gets in a scrap with some soldiers and revives in a jail cell, badly beaten and, he slowly discovers, completely blind. And things get worse: his girlfriend disappears, the police question him for a crime they won't name, and his stab at disability compensation embroils him in the Kafkaesque red tape of the welfare bureaucracy. Told in the utterly uncensored language of the Scottish working class, this is a dark and subtly political parable of struggle and survival, rich with irony and black humor.
Genres: FictionScotlandLiterary FictionNovelsContemporaryBritish LiteratureLiteratureClassics20th CenturyCrime
388 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
1118 (24%)
4 star
1547 (33%)
3 star
1208 (26%)
2 star
506 (11%)
1 star
255 (6%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by James Kelman

Lists with this book

Life of Pi
The God of Small Things
The Remains of the Day
Booker Prize Winners
60 books1975 voters
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
One Hundred Years of Solitude
A Thousand Splendid Suns
Most Poetic Book Titles
2067 books890 voters
Outlander
Macbeth
The Viking's Apprentice
Best Scottish Fiction
408 books282 voters
The Road
Never Let Me Go
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time