Author:Alan Warner

After the scandalous theft of a pub's World Cup cash kitty, a homeless drifter pursues his eccentric uncle: 'The Man Who Walks', up into the Highlands to recover the money - a cool -27,000. The nephew's frantic, stalled progress and other bizarre diversions form this wickedly hilarious novel. But who is The Man Who Walks? Is he simply a water-carrying madman with one glass eye and a fondness for whisky and pony nuts, and who has a physiological inability to handle slopes? Or is he a savant, touched by the hand of God, wandering the back roads along ancient, ancestral tracks? And as the sinister, unstable nephew gains on The Man Who Walks, can it be that it will all end in a field and that this field is Culloden Moor?
A brilliant road movie (on foot) of a book
—— Irvine WelshA universal tale of adolescent angst
—— Adrian Turpin , Financial TimesWhitehead proves himself, among other things, a poet of the American summer and its aspirations...remarkable
—— Guardianit is impossible not to like Sag Harbor and its genuinely empathetic, intelligent tone
—— Neel Mukherjee , The TimesWhitehead has tapped the most classic summer-novel activity of al: nostalgia
—— TimeIt's rare to come across a coming-of-age novel as polished as Colson Whitehead's Sag Harbor
—— New StatesmanWhitehead's delicious language and sarcastic, clever voice fit this teenager who's slowly constructing himself
—— New York TimesPerfectly portrays the constant and mortifying awkwardness of teenage existence
—— AestheticaIntimate and autobiographical story...the novel can't help but hold your attention
—— Ned Beauman , Dazed & Confused






