Kindle Price: $11.99

These promotions will be applied to this item:

Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.

Audiobook Price: $18.08

Save: $5.09 (28%)

You've subscribed to ! We will preorder your items within 24 hours of when they become available. When new books are released, we'll charge your default payment method for the lowest price available during the pre-order period.
Update your device or payment method, cancel individual pre-orders or your subscription at
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Buy for others

Give as a gift or purchase for a team or group.
Learn more

Buying and sending eBooks to others

  1. Select quantity
  2. Buy and send eBooks
  3. Recipients can read on any device

These ebooks can only be redeemed by recipients in the US. Redemption links and eBooks cannot be resold.

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.

Mayflies: A Novel Kindle Edition

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 4,831 ratings

An unforgettable coming-of-age novel that becomes a profound mediation on life, death, and lifelong friendship.

Everyone has a Tully Dawson: the friend who defines your life.

In the summer of 1986, in a small Scottish town, James and Tully ignite a brilliant friendship based on music, films and the rebel spirit. With school over and the locked world of their fathers before them, they rush towards the climax of their youth: a magical weekend in Manchester, the epicentre of everything that inspires them in working-class Britain. There, against the greatest soundtrack ever recorded, a vow is made: to go at life differently.

Thirty years on, half a life away, the phone rings. Tully has news--news that forces the life-long friends to confront their own mortality head-on. What follows is an incredibly moving examination of the responsibilities and obligations we have to those we love.
Mayflies is at once a finely-tuned drama about the delicacy and impermanence of human connection and an urgent inquiry into some of the most important questions of all: Who are we? What do we owe to our friends? And what does it mean to love another person amidst tragedy?
Read more Read less

Add a debit or credit card to save time when you check out
Convenient and secure with 2 clicks. Add your card
Popular Highlights in this book

Editorial Reviews

Review

"A beautiful ode to lost youth and male friendship written by one of our sharpest observers of modern masculinity." —Douglas Stuart, author of Shuggie Bain

"
Mayflies is one of those novels to press into the hands of friends. Beautifully written—wise, funny, poetic, alert to time, place and the ordinary human . . . I adored this book." Carol Ann Duffy

"(...) tender, heartfelt"
The New York Times, New & Noteworthy

"Mayflies
is entirely unexpected; a joyful, warm and heart-filling tribute to the million-petalled flower of male friendship. This book will last beyond these feverish times: it's not just a reminder that culture makes the worst things bearable, but a beautiful example of it in action." —The Times

"A rare thing: a life-enhancing novel about death. It will stay with you and you will want to read it again."
Scotsman

"Life-loving and elegiac."
Observer

"A delightful nostalgia trip of enduring teenage friendship . . . an affecting and evocative picture of an era and a relationship."
Daily Telegraph

"O'Hagan has written a tight, delicate and soulful novel . . . about the power of enduring friendship."
Sunday Times

"An assured and self-contained piece of theatre, in which love of many kinds is tested,
Mayflies is rich in allusions, gracefully written, yet vigorous. . . . This is a book of high artistic ambition, and a reminder, were it needed, of the seriousness that fiction can address . . . O'Hagan's achievement is not to flinch from reality, nor to wallow in misery, but to fill the pages with roaring life, right up to the last kick of the ball." The Herald

"Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone and read Andrew O'Hagan's new novel.
Mayflies is a lifetime book." The Australian

About the Author

ANDREW O'HAGAN was born in Glasgow. He has been nominated for the Booker Prize, was voted one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists in 2003, and he won the E. M. Forster Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He is Editor-at-Large of the London Review of Books and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B08941CBNR
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ McClelland & Stewart (May 18, 2021)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 18, 2021
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1850 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 284 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 4,831 ratings

About the author

Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.
Andrew O'Hagan
Brief content visible, double tap to read full content.
Full content visible, double tap to read brief content.

Instagram: @andrewohaganauthor

BIOGRAPHY

Andrew O'Hagan was born in Glasgow. His novel Mayflies won the Christopher Isherwood Prize. He has been nominated for the Booker Prize, was voted one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists in 2003, and won the E.M. Forster Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He is Editor-at-Large of the London Review of Books and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Andrew also writes regularly for The New Yorker, Esquire, and the New York Review of Books. In 2024, he was made an Honorary Professor of Literature at the University of Glasgow.

The BBC adaptation of Mayflies, produced by Synchronic Films, won a BAFTA for best scripted drama in 2023.

Caledonian Road is to become a returning TV drama, produced by Sinestra Films, directed by Johan Renck (who directed Chernobyl for HBO), and the show runner is Will Smith who wrote Slow Horses.

UPDATE

My last novel, Mayflies, published n 2021, is the story of Tully Dawson, a music-loving hero, the narrator's best friend. They made a small legend of their glory years. In the summer of 1986 their shared love of bands and politics projects them, with a group of their chums, to a festival in Manchester and the very pinnacle of their youth. Thirty years later, the telephone rings. Tully is facing the crisis of his life and that old friendship is put to the test.

I was overwhelmed by the way Mayflies was taken up by readers. I still get hundreds of messages from readers throughout the world -- men and women who identify with the deep friendship of Tully, Jimmy and the boys. Many of my readers lost someone in their lives and the book, in a way, seemed to become a rallying place for readers who'd experienced such personal loss. The book, and it's adaptation by the BBC, really struck a chord and the story is very close to my heart.

For my new book Caledonian Road, I worked on a much bigger canvas, giving a portrait of modern Britain, but it is no less intimate -- in some ways, it is more so. As with Mayflies, it's a story about a man finding out what he's made of -- but in this case, he is also about to find out what the society he lives in is made of.

Campbell Flynn is a fifty-something Scottish art historian living off the Caledonian Road. He is successful, well-connected, living in a big house in a beautiful square, with a wife he loves and interesting children. But something is going badly wrong. The quintessential 'good liberal', Campbell is teetering on the edge of something awful -- he is losing himself. Is he decent? Has he been ignoring what his friends have been doing? Is he obsessed with money? Is he is falling into error? Is he on 'the right side of history"? Over the course of a single year, from May 2021, secrets and corruptions begin to be revealed to Campbell, and his own mistakes begin to take over his life.

'He always knew that when his life came tumbling down, it would occur in public.'

Power. Money. Politics.

Set at the high water mark of Boris Johnson's Britain, Caledonian Road is a story of our times, the story of one man's epic fall from grace.

One American journalist has called it 'like having a backstage pass to London'. That's what I wanted to write: in the great tradition of the Victorian novel, a page-turning with ethical eruptions.

'A BARNSTORMING NOVEL'

The Observer

'WHERE ARE ALL THE GREAT STATE-OF-THE-NATION NOVELS? STEP FORWARD ANDREW O'HAGAN'

The Sunday Times

'PULLS DOWN THE FACADES OF HIGH SOCIETY...AN UTTER JOY TO READ.'

Monica Ali

'WITH THIS MAGNUM OPUS, O'HAGAN HAS MADE A SOCIAL MIRACLE.'

Pulitzer prizewinner Josh Cohen

'I LOVED THIS NOVEL -- LOVED ITS AMBITION AND SCALE AND SCOPE AND CERTAINTY -- IT'S PANACHE AND BRIO AND JOY IN THE WRITING.'

Peter Morgan, creator of The Crown

A JOURNEY INTO MY BOOKS

I grew up loving stories where real worlds and imagined ones fuse together. There's a grain of fiction in every day facts, and a quality of fact in the fiction I care about. To tell the truth, I've always felt that Britain is as pretty under-described territory, so from the beginning it seemed natural to me that reporting and memory, as much as plot and invention, might open up new stories to readers.

My first book was The Missing. I was in my 20s then, and was still thinking about a child who had disappeared from a housing estate near ours in Ayrshire. I went in search of him, and it became a search into the lost nature of my own family story, as well as a tendency, in certain British lives, for people's narratives to fade. I covered the trial of the killer Rosemary West and looked for the stories of the victims, many of whom had never been reported as missing. When the book came out it seemed to chime with an atmosphere in Britain, a worry about what our politics was doing to our sense of decency and the common good, and I followed it with essays about the the state of the nation. I've never really stopped writing those pieces, most of them appearing in the London Review of Books.

My first novel really grew out of those enquiries. I wanted to animate the idealism behind the slum-clearance obsession in Glasgow in the 1960s, and it centred on one family, the Bawns, and their post-war experience. When the novel was shortlisted for the Booker Prize, a lot of people wrote to me about what was happening in their own communities. Some of those people were from Eastern Europe, too, talking about how fiction might play a part in understanding 'improvement' and raising awareness of how we live now.

I was gripped by the rise of celebrity culture and wrote a novel, Personality, a book in many voices, inspired by the life of a young singer from a Scottish island who suffers in the midst of fame. That interest took a comic turn in The Life and Opinions of Maf the Dog, narrated by Marilyn Monroe's dog, a real little entity called Mafia Honey. (Given to Marilyn in 1960 by Frank Sinatra. For real.) I spent a lot of time in American researching that book, making TV programmes and getting to know the absurd.

In Be Near Me, I focused on the problem of a troubled and troubling priest living in a small Scottish community, suddenly wrapped up in a blaze of publicity that sends him back into his own conscience and memory. And in The Illuminations, I told the story of a young soldier returning from Afghanistan, and his closeness to his grandmother, a documentary photographer with a host of secrets in her past.

Writing, for me, has always been a process of entering into a dialogue with my readers, finding common ground and fresh debate. It's great meeting audiences at festivals and hearing how the stories I've tried to unearth sit with their experience. Our common knowledge of the world is constantly changing -- being deepened, altered, challenged, made new -- and I've used reportage and the essay to engage in my own way with those changes. The digital world is a place of thrilling power-displacement and threat and I have sat inside that world and described it close-up in my writing. The Secret Life, a book of non-fiction, gives accounts from the front line with Julian Assange, with the purported inventor of Bitcoin, and from a digital world where identity is unstable. In The Atlantic Ocean, essays and reports from all of those fronts, and others -- hurricanes, court cases, journeys into war -- were brought together to show readers that truthful writing might still be our best mode of witnessing.

Mayflies distilled a single summer and a lifelong friendship into a bestselling book.

With Caledonian Road, I feel I've used the past to reach into the present, to find a new kind of story. A reported novel, it dramatises the internet era in modern London.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
4,831 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2022
Initially, as I started this novel I was not certain how I felt about it - I don’t always enjoy the coming-of-age or Bildungsroman genre.

However, I have to say there is a different element to this novel which I enjoyed. It contains witty humour with the desperate wildness of youth and the desire to be involved with ‘hip’ moments that turn into nostalgic memories which we all want to relive as adults. I think every one of us wants to return to our flash moments and relive them, no matter how wild or immature they may now seem.

James and Tully remind me so much of my childhood, my best friend (we are still friends almost 40 years later), and our wild shenanigans which, when I reflect on, make me wonder how we ever got away with some of the nonsense we got up to. And it makes me cringe to think that any of my potential offspring (which I don’t have!) may have done the very same things or worse!

The synopsis of this book states “Everyone has a Tully Dawson: the friend who defines your life.” I have a Tully Dawson. But I also believe that everyone has a James too. That friend that you can lean on and that will do the hardest things for you in the face of adversity.

This book was filled with so much movie, music and book humour and quotes that the literary-lover in me jumped for joy and the small movie- and music-lover smiled with nostalgia over movie titles and groovy bands. Let me not even go into the recognition of the alcohol-induced haze of random comments, sleeping spots and general attacks of teenage-adulthood!

Although humorous, the depth of emotion is highly charged. Having just recently lost one of my best friends, I found it hard to stop tears leaking from my eyes and betraying me. And as the “James character” in my own life story I realised what I would do for “my Tully” (who is, thankfully, still in my life).

I loved the use of typical Scottish words such as blether, weans, dreeped, bawbag, toffs and chippy. The mention of Wigtown got me all excited too!

This book put in my mind the deep friendship element of Kristin Hannah’s ‘Firefly Lane’. If you loved that book, you will love this one. Just as I did.

This novel was the February recommendation from The Scotland Bookclub (yes, I am ahead in the reading!)

There are so many beautiful sentences loaded with meaning in this novel but this one stands out to me:
‘It can take a whole lifetime to know how to thank a person.’
I understand that sentence very well.
7 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2021
I'm not convinced I would have read this book except it was a selection chosen on Audible's Graham Norton's book club. It's a coming of middle age story. The time in ones life when the dust settles from growing up. A book like this brings out a romanticized wish in me of friendship that has lasted since high school. The first part of this book sets the stage of this strongly bonded friendship. The second part defines what it is to be a friend to someone who is terminally ill. Reading the description I thought this would be a tear jerker through its entirety, but Mr. O'Hagan in my opinion has written a book about a loyal friendship with a wit and humor that made me mostly laugh. I would not have a problem recommending this book to a friend.
8 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2021
This reminded me so much of my youth in Scotland in the 80s it was like living it again. The sweetness of this story is like a male version of love story, not him erotic at all but the sweetness of true, deep friendship.
2 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2023
Mayflies is about a small group of friends from Glasgow, mostly working-class boys, who go to rock concerts in Manchester, have some adventures, return to Glasgow and get on with the rest of their lives. I was the wrong reader for the book. Too old to recognize the rock groups mentioned many times or their songs and too American to understand what it meant to be from Glasgow. The author is a good writer and I'll try some of his other books.
2 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2021
The way he moved from a wild memory from his youth to the ultimately serious and poignant conflicts we all face at age.
Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2021
I liked the theme of friendship and the excellent writing. It was difficult for me to follow the thousands of references to movies, music, poetry; however, the point of all that was to show the brilliance of these young men and their passions. The narrator says "Everyone has a Tulley." I did and can truly relate to the magnetism of such a friend as Tulley.
2 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2020
This is two very different novels put together, although the second half could not exist without the first. In the mid-eighties, a time of miners' strikes, Margaret Thatcher and the peak of indie rock, a group of young Scottish men plan a weekend trip to Manchester for a music festival headlined by The Smiths. James, called Noodles by his friends, is the first of his family and neighborhood to be accepted into university. Tully is his best friend, a charismatic, easy-going, always in the center of things guy, whose playful exterior hides anxiety about his future.

This is a joy-filled romp of a perfect weekend and I loved every single paragraph. O'Hagan perfectly captures that moment of young adulthood when the world opens up and music is the most important thing. I'm not that much younger than the boys in this story and their adventures brought back so many memories of small clubs and perfect nights out.

The second half of the book concerns Tully and James, now three decades older. Tully is diagnosed with cancer and he's determined to go out on his own terms and his best friend, James, is the person he most trusts to stand by him. This half has a much more serious tone, despite the unemployed workers and casual racism of the first half. But the fun of the beginning gives an earned emotional depth to this story of a man supporting his best friend.
5 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2021
Really interesting poignant and bittersweet read.
A Tale of male friendship at it's finest. Life, Death, love it's got everything.
Starts in 1986 and sails through to 2017.
I found it to be a slow read but it lets you savor it throughout.
One person found this helpful
Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
Auntie
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 7, 2024
My friend recommended this book and I thought, why do I want to read about adolescent boys? (I’m a 60+ year old woman). But how wrong I was!! This is a brilliant book, a great story and the writing amazing. Would thoroughly recommend, whatever your age!!
5 people found this helpful
Report
Tania A.
5.0 out of 5 stars Todo bien hasta la fecha, espero q sigan creciendo cada vez más y sea satisfactorio para todos
Reviewed in Spain on June 23, 2022
Muy buen trabajo, las entregas bien en el tiempo, devoluciones bien hechas, pago seguro, todo bueno la verdad, espero q continúen así y aumenten sus ventas, excelente amazon.
Charles Lambert
5.0 out of 5 stars A paean to friendship
Reviewed in Italy on May 30, 2021
A beautiful book, about the ties that bind us to each other, about youth and responsibility and love, about all the complexity and depth and aching fragility of life. I loved it. It made me cry.
One person found this helpful
Report
Hewy
5.0 out of 5 stars Mayflies
Reviewed in Australia on May 1, 2024
Hecky thump!

Amazing read.

I’m done, I’m finished. The bravery, the honesty.

A life examined!

Truly beautifully examined. Fantastic read.

Opens up a universe to discuss.
Daddy Yankee
1.0 out of 5 stars Tries To Hard
Reviewed in Japan on January 21, 2024
Dull and full of itself!
Report an issue

Does this item contain inappropriate content?
Do you believe that this item violates a copyright?
Does this item contain quality or formatting issues?