James Kelman was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1989 with A Disaffection, which also won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction. He went on to win the Booker Prize five years later with How Late it Was, How Late, before being shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize in 2009 and 2011.
Dirt Road is brilliant . . . a deeply moving and exciting novel
*RODDY DOYLE*
A brilliantly understated tale about coming of age, grief and the
folk music of the American deep south . . . poignant and beautiful
*****
* * Daily Telegraph * *
A delight . . . The best thing [Kelman] has written
* * Scotsman * *
In Dirt Road James Kelman brings alive a human consciousness like
no other writer can
*ALAN WARNER*
Another masterpiece from one of our best writers
* * Guardian * *
Kelman in the American South, with a zydeco lilt, proves
irresistible - a thrilling return from one of our most essential
novelists
*KEVIN BARRY*
Strange and beautiful . . . Kelman gives us visceral vernacular,
Joycean stream of consciousness, wry humor, old resentments and
painful memories, all in counterpoint to the music on and off stage
. . . A celebration of what it is to be human
* * Spectator * *
Beautiful. Dirt Road is about coming of age, grief and the folk
music of the American deep south
* * Daily Telegraph * *
Draws you like a magnet
* * Herald Scotland * *
In writing as pure as this, language becomes the very bones and
meat of the characters. I am not transported by these sentences
into Murdo's world; I am Murdo
*ROSS RAISIN*
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