Book Lists

Best Selling Books by James Kelman

James Kelman is the author of How Late it Was, how Late (1996), If It Is Your Life (2014), The Story of the Stone (2025), Mo Said She Was Quirky (2013), You Have to be Careful in the Land of the Free (2005).

1 - 40 of 1,000,000 results
>>

How Late it Was, how Late

release date: Jan 01, 1996
How Late it Was, how Late
In Scotland, the portrait of a petty crook who had one run-in with police too many. It is a series of reflections as he sits in jail, contemplating his fate. He had been in trouble before, but this time it''s different, the latest brawl with police cost him his eyesight. Now in addition to all his other troubles he is blind.

If It Is Your Life

release date: Jul 15, 2014
If It Is Your Life
A collection of short stories by the Booker Prize-winning Scottish master Giving voice to the dispossessed and crafting stories of lives held in the balance, James Kelman reaches us all. Penetrating deeply into the hearts, minds, and desperation of characters who find themselves in everyday situations—in the hospital, at a bus stop, in a living room with the endless roar of the vacuum cleaner and a distant wife—Kelman follows their streams of consciousness and brings their worries to life. With honesty and dark humor, he confronts the issues of language, class, politics, gender, and age—identity in all its forms.

The Story of the Stone

release date: Apr 22, 2025
The Story of the Stone
James Kelman has made use of the short form all of his writing life, calling on the different traditions where such stories are central within the culture, beginning and ending in freedom, the freedom to create. People should know that their stories count, no matter how personal, how emotional, how eccentric, how trivial, how stupid or how self-centred they may appear. Just make them, and make them your own, in spite of hostility, of negativity, of the threat of punishment: go to it. Language is with the user and you are the user. Make these stories and make them your own.

Mo Said She Was Quirky

release date: Apr 23, 2013
Mo Said She Was Quirky
James Kelman, the Man Booker Prize–winning author of How Late It Was, How Late, tells the story of Helen—a sister, a mother, a daughter—a very ordinary young woman. Her boyfriend said she was quirky but she is much more than that. Trust, love, relationships; parents, children, lovers; death, wealth, home: these are the ordinary parts of the everyday that become extraordinary when you think of them as Helen does, each waking hour. Mo Said She Was Quirky begins on Helen’s way home from work, with the strangest of moments when a skinny, down-at-heel man crosses the road in front of her and appears to be her lost brother. What follows is an inspired and absorbing story of twenty-four hours in the life of a young woman.

You Have to be Careful in the Land of the Free

release date: May 05, 2005
You Have to be Careful in the Land of the Free
Jeremiah Brown is a man of extremes. So when he nips out for a quick drink on the eve of returning to his native Scotland after twelve years in America, anything could happen. Anything at all. Just one quick drink to help him sleep but there''s something about this town and this bar that reminds him of his ex. Soon the memories are flooding in and as the night goes on and the decision to stop smoking looks increasingly ill-timed for a card-carrying alien of questionable politics, Jeremiah getting on that flight tomorrow starts to seem far from certain. Is there any such thing as a certainty? Not tonight. Tonight the only thing certain is that you have to be very careful in the land of the free.

The Good Times

release date: Jan 01, 1998
The Good Times
From "one of the new, true masters of millennial English" (Russell Banks), James Kelman''s first new work since his Booker Prize-winning novel, How late it was, how late.

Translated Accounts

release date: Jan 01, 2001
Translated Accounts
A groundbreaking, verbally dazzling work of compelling importance from a modern master. Since the publication in 1994 of the Booker Prize-winning," How late it was, how late, James Kelman has been working on Translated Accounts. The new novel is set in an unnamed territory or country that appears to be under military rule. It is narrated in the first person, but the narrator remains anonymous, as do most of the other characters. The language used is an atypical English form, but akin to the basic translation that might appear within a department of an overseas ''foreign office.'' Perhaps someone transcribed first-hand accounts of certain incidents, events and states of mind, as narrated by participants in the struggle and then passed on the transcriptions for translation; or perhaps the accounts were simply translated first-hand into English and edited later. In either case the results were dispatched to a more senior civil servant who later handed them over to an appropriate state agency.

A Disaffection

release date: Jan 01, 1989
A Disaffection
Patrick Doyle is a 29-year-old teacher in an ordinary school. Disaffected, frustrated, and increasingly bitter at the system he is employed to maintain, Patrick begins his rebellion, fuelled by drink and his passionate, unrequited love for a fellow teacher. This is an apparently straightforward story of one week in a man''s life in which he decides to change the way he lives. Under the surface, however, lies a brilliant and complex examination of class, human culture, and character written with irony, tenderness, enormous anger, and, above all, the honesty that has marked James Kelman as one of the most important writers in contemporary Britain.

Kieron Smith, boy

release date: Apr 30, 2009
Kieron Smith, boy
Rejected by his brother and largely ignored by his parents, Kieron Smith finds comfort - and endless stories - in the home of his much-loved grandparents. But when his family move to a new housing scheme on the outskirts of the city, a world away from the close community of the tenements, Kieron struggles to find a way to adapt to his new life. Warm, funny, with searing insight and astonishing empathy, in Kieron Smith, James Kelman has created an unforgettable boy.

Keep Moving and No Questions

release date: Aug 22, 2023
Keep Moving and No Questions
James Kelman''s inimitable voice brings the stories of lost men to light in these twenty-one tales of down on their luck antiheroes who wander, drink, hatch plans, ponder existence, and survive in an unwelcoming and often comic world. Keep Moving and No Questions is a collection of the finest examples of Kelman''s facility with dialog, stream-of-consciousness narrative, and sharp cultural observation. Class is always central in these brief glimpses of men abiding the hands they''ve been dealt. An ideal introduction to Kelman''s work and a wonderful edition for fans and Kelman completists, this lovely volume will make clear why James Kelman is known as the greatest living modernist writer. Five of the stories collected here are brand new, and the rest have been significantly revised by the author for this definitive edition.

Dirt Road

release date: Jul 14, 2016
Dirt Road
''The truth is he didn''t care how long he was going away. Forever would have suited him. It didn''t matter it was America.'' Murdo, a teenager obsessed with music, wishes for a life beyond the constraints of his Scottish island home and dreams of becoming his own man.Tom, battered by loss, stumbles backwards towards the future, terrified of losing his dignity, his control, his son and the last of his family life. Both are in search of something new as they set out on an expedition into the American South. On the road we discover whether the hopes of youth can conquer the fears of age.Dirt Road is a major novel exploring the brevity of life, the agonising demands of love and the lure of the open road. It is also a beautiful book about the power of music and all that it can offer. From the understated serenity of Kelman''s prose - like a Hibernian Carver - emerges a devastating emotional power.

The Busconductor Hines

The Busconductor Hines
Living in a no-bedroomed tenement flat, coping with the cold and boredom of busconducting and the bloody-mindedness of Head Office, knowing that emigrating to Australia is only an impossible dream, Robert Hines finds life to be ¿a very perplexing kettle of coconuts¿. The compensations are a wife and child, and a gloriously anarchic imagination. The Busconductor Hines is a brilliantly executed, uncompromising slice of the Glasgow scene, a portrait of working-class life which is unheroic but humane.

That Was a Shiver

release date: Aug 03, 2017
That Was a Shiver
"Thought-provoking" short stories from the Man Booker Prize–winning author of How Late It Was, How Late and Kieron Smith, Boy ( Scotsman). A trucker passes through a town he used to know and a local tries to sell him his sister; a couple put their children to bed and hear a loud scratching at the wall; a Principal and his associate examine the dead body before them; a man looks into a mirror and reflects on becoming more like his father. Sparky, touching, and brilliantly daring, these stories uncover human feeling in the ordinary and the everyday, and are a reminder of Kelman''s exceptional talent. Shortlisted for the Saltire Fiction Book of the Year · Longlisted for the Edge Hill Prize. "Kelman brings alive a human consciousness like no other writer can." —Alan Warner, award-winning author of The Man Who Walks "The mixture of the precisely but surreally bureaucratic and the casually macabre is perfectly judged." — The Times "Kelman is on another level to most of the living writers in the UK." — The Guardian "Kelman has always been a true and honest writer; which is why he is one of the fairly few who really matter." — Scotsman "Kelman''s language is immediately exciting; like a musician, he uses repetition and rhythm." — The New Yorker

God's Teeth and Other Phenomena

release date: Jul 05, 2020
God's Teeth and Other Phenomena
Jack Proctor, a celebrated older writer and curmudgeon, goes off to residency where he is to be an honored part of teaching and giving public readings, he soon finds the atmosphere of the literary world has changed since his last foray into the public sphere. Unknown to most, unable to work on his own writing, surrounded by a host of odd characters, would-be writers, antagonists, handlers, and members of the elite House of Art and Aesthetics, Proctor finds himself driven to distraction (literally in a very very tiny car). This is a story of a man attempting not to go mad when forced to stop his own writing in order to coach others to write. Proctor’s tour of rural places, pubs, theaters, fancy parties, where he is to be headlining as a "Banker-Prize-Winning-Author" reads like a literary version of Spinal Tap. Uproariously funny, brilliantly philosophical, gorgeously written this is James Kelman at his best.

All We Have Is the Story

release date: Apr 30, 2024
All We Have Is the Story
Novelist, playwright, essayist, and master of the short story. Artist and engaged working-class intellectual; husband, father, and grandfather as well as committed revolutionary activist. From his first publication (a short story collection An Old Pub Near the Angel on a tiny American press) through his latest novel (God''s Teeth and other Phenomena) and work with Noam Chomsky (Between Thought and Expression Lies a Lifetime—both published on a slightly larger American press), All We Have Is the Story chronicles the life and work—to date—of “Probably the most influential novelist of the post-war period.” (The Times) Drawing deeply on a radical tradition that is simultaneously political, philosophical, cultural, and literary, James Kelman articulates the complexities and tensions of the craft of writing; the narrative voice and grammar; imperialism and language; art and value; solidarity and empathy; class and nation state; and. above all, that it begins and ends with the story. “One of the things the establishment always does is isolate voices of dissent and make them specific—unique if possible. It''s easy to dispense with dissent if you can say there''s him in prose and him in poetry. As soon as you say there''s him, him, and her there, and that guy here and that woman over there, and there''s all these other writers in Africa, and then you''ve got Ireland, the Caribean—suddenly there''s this kind of mass dissent going on, and that becomes something dangerous, something that the establishment won''t want people to relate to and go Christ, you''re doing the same as me. Suddenly there''s a movement going on. It''s fine when it''s all these disparate voices; you can contain that. The first thing to do with dissent is say ‘You''re on your own, you''re a phenomenon.’ I''m not a phenomenon at all: I''m just a part of what''s been happening in prose for a long, long while.” —James Kelman from a 1993 interview

The State is the Enemy

release date: Aug 01, 2023
The State is the Enemy
Incendiary and heartrending, the sixteen essays in The State Is the Enemy lay bare government brutality against the working class, immigrants, asylum-seekers, ethnic minorities, and all who are deemed of “a lower order.” Drawing parallels between atrocities committed against the Kurds by the Turkish State, and the racist police brutality, and government sanctioned murders in the UK, James Kelman shatters the myth of Western exceptionalism,revealing the universality of terror campaigns levied against the most vulnerable, and calling on a global citizenship to stand in solidarity with victims of oppression. Kelman’s case against the Turkish and British governments is not just a litany of murders, or an impassioned plea—it is a cool-headed take down of the State and an essential primer for revolutionaries.
1 - 40 of 1,000,000 results
>>


  • Aboutread.com makes it one-click away to discover great books from local library by linking books/movies to your library catalog search.

  • Copyright © 2026 Aboutread.com