Skip to content

The Glass Cage

The second volume of memoir by John Healy, published almost forty years after his first: the ‘savage masterpiece’ that was The Grass Arena.

Publication date: 21 August, 2025
Status: Supporters list closed
Book: Ebook Download
Regular price £8.99
Regular price Sale price £8.99

Description

The second volume of memoir by John Healy, published thirty-seven years after his first: the ‘savage masterpiece’ that was The Grass Arena.


With imaginative prose and startling imagery, Healy takes us on a journey where he first works in a late-night cafe serving whores, pimps, druggies, window-ledgers, handbag snatchers, narks, pervs, ponces, halfwits, old shoulder rollers, broken-down bouncers and the odd psychopath. Situated at the dim end of the counter at the furthest corner from God’s light on earth, he plans his escape and ends up in a world more treacherous and dangerous than he could ever have imagined. In this world of middle-class literature, living hand to mouth, he writes The Grass Arena and is suddenly propelled into a place far superior to his own: a place he both desired and feared.


To become suddenly famous in an unfamiliar world of power and privilege was completely disorienting. He finds himself thrown into unpredictable situations that call for a tact where he was more used to situations where people achieved their aims through superior brutality.


The Glass Cage
is an unrepentant account of a life few of us could imagine. A worthy sequel to The Grass Arena, it is John Healy’s crowning achievement.

About the Author

John Healy

John Healy was born in London in 1942. After a troubled childhood he became a boxer and according to his trainer, the great George Francis, ‘Healy was a stylist with concussive power in both hands’. He was tipped for the top, unfortunately in the end it was drink that carried the knockout blow. Already an alcoholic by his late teens he was pressed into the army and after getting drunk and resisting the guard he was transferred to a penal battalion in a military prison. Discharged onto the street, he spent 15 violent years in a wino jungle.

 During one of his prison sentences another prisoner Harry Collins (known as ‘The Brighton Fox’) taught Healy to play chess. Showing a remarkable aptitude for the game he stopped drinking and won 10 major chess tournaments.

In 1986, living hand-to-mouth on a council estate at King’s Cross, he wrote his ‘savage masterpiece,’ The Grass Arena which won the PEN Ackerley award (Europe’s top award for literary memoir) and was described on Radio 4 by Matthew Sweet as ‘one of the great works of the 20th century.’  The book was made into a film (in which he was played by Mark Rylance) and between them they have a clutch of major national and international awards.

The Glass Cage is his second volume of memoir.

Your cart is empty