Awaydays
By (Author) Kevin Sampson
Canongate Books
Canongate Canons
22nd October 2024
1st August 2024
Main - Canons
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Narrative theme: Social issues
Narrative theme: Sense of place
Association football (Soccer)
Paperback
224
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 13mm
159g
I am the product of a blank generation. I live for kicks. I live for me.Birkenhead, 1979. The Pack, a violent mob of Stanley-knife-wielding football hooligans, follow their team across the Northern wastelands to their away games - earning a reputation as the nastiest crew in the Third Division. For the young working-class men with no way out, their lives revolve around the fashion, the music and the mayhem. But for two of them, Carty and Elvis, escaping towards a different future might mean leaving each other behind.Quickly gaining cult status when first published, Awaydays is both a powerful evocation of a time and a culture, and a poignant coming-of-age story about finding your identity, escaping your circumstances and the unspoken intensity of male friendships.
'Sampson is a fine storyteller . . . Nasty stuff, brilliantly told' - Guardian
'The dark side of Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch' - NME
'An acutely observed rite-of-passage story . . . a time and a generation which has too often been reduced to cliche' - Independent on Sunday
'A gritty novel with wit and humour at every turn' - Maxim
'What's in a cult novel A great story, charismatic characters, a powerful narrative voice and an evocative style. If these are the basic ingredients to achieve the perfect cult status, then Kevin Sampson's Awaydays has them all' - Dazed
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Kevin Sampson is a British novelist and screenwriter, best known for his novels Awaydays (1998), Powder (1999), Stars Are Stars (2006) and The Killing Pool (2014). He began his career in the music industry by writing gig reviews for NME in the 80s and has written for i-D, Arena, Sounds, Time Out and the Observer. He was part of Produce Records, who had a string of Top 40 hits in the 90s including The Farm's 'Groovy Train' and 'All Together Now'. His screenwriting credits include Anne (ITV, 2022), The Hunt for Raoul Moat (2023) and the film adaption of Awaydays (2009).@ksampsonwriter