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Young Mungo Hardcover – April 5, 2022

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 9,276 ratings

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A story of queer love and working-class families, Young Mungo is the brilliant second novel from the Booker Prize-winning author of Shuggie Bain

Douglas Stuart’s first novel Shuggie Bain, winner of the 2020 Booker Prize, is one of the most successful literary debuts of the century so far. Published or forthcoming in forty territories, it has sold more than one million copies worldwide. Now Stuart returns with Young Mungo, his extraordinary second novel. Both a page-turner and literary tour de force, it is a vivid portrayal of working-class life and a deeply moving and highly suspenseful story of the dangerous first love of two young men.

Growing up in a housing estate in Glasgow, Mungo and James are born under different stars—Mungo a Protestant and James a Catholic—and they should be sworn enemies if they’re to be seen as men at all. Yet against all odds, they become best friends as they find a sanctuary in the pigeon dovecote that James has built for his prize racing birds. As they fall in love, they dream of finding somewhere they belong, while Mungo works hard to hide his true self from all those around him, especially from his big brother Hamish, a local gang leader with a brutal reputation to uphold. And when several months later Mungo’s mother sends him on a fishing trip to a loch in Western Scotland with two strange men whose drunken banter belies murky pasts, he will need to summon all his inner strength and courage to try to get back to a place of safety, a place where he and James might still have a future.

Imbuing the everyday world of its characters with rich lyricism and giving full voice to people rarely acknowledged in the literary world, Young Mungo is a gripping and revealing story about the bounds of masculinity, the divisions of sectarianism, the violence faced by many queer people, and the dangers of loving someone too much.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

An Amazon Best Book of April 2022: Douglas Stuart’s debut novel, Shuggie Bain, won the Booker Prize in 2020, and two years later, he’s back with another triumph. Young Mungo follows a young Scottish boy who can’t quite control his face as he navigates life with his drunk mother, his brutal gang-leader older brother, his loving sister, and finding friendship—at first—and then more, with a boy named James. With a gentleness that defies the hard-scrap poverty social order around him, Mungo is a character you root for as he dodges the hate and violence of 1990’s Glasgow. Cinematic, intimate, emotionally provocative, Stuart is a master of fiction and exploring just how dangerous love can be. —Al Woodworth, Amazon Editor

Review

Praise for Young Mungo:

Shortlisted for the Polari Book Prize

Longlisted for the Dublin Literary Award

Longlisted for the Goldsboro Books Glass Bell Award

Named a Best Book of the Year by the Washington Post, NPR, Time, Kirkus Reviews, Guardian, Amazon, Apple, BookPageBookBrowse, Library Journal, Reader’s Digest, AARP, Hudson Booksellers, Chicago Public Library, and the Times (UK)

A New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice

Shortlisted for Scotland’s National Book Award

Named a Most Anticipated Book of 2022 by the New York TimesTime, VogueGuardian, Entertainment Weekly, Irish Times, Kirkus Reviews, and Literary Hub

Young Mungo seals it: Douglas Stuart is a genius . . . A tale of romantic and sexual awakening punctuated by horrific violence. . . . The raw poetry of Stuart’s prose is perfect to catch the open spirit of this handsome boy . . . Stuart quickly proves himself an extraordinarily effective thriller writer. He’s capable of pulling the strings of suspense excruciatingly tight while still sensitively exploring the confused mind of this gentle adolescent trying to make sense of his sexuality . . . But even as Stuart draws these timelines together like a pair of scissors, he creates a little space for Mungo’s future, a little mercy for this buoyant young man.”—Ron Charles, Washington Post

“[A] bear hug of a new novel . . . It’s a classic Dickensian arc: The unwanted young lad, hoping for better things, is caught up in broader violent schemes and made to choose between the life he wants for himself and the one set out before him . . . But novelists have been flaccidly imitating the 19th century realists for so long that it’s a shock when one carries it out this successfully. Stuart oozes story. Mungo is alive. There is feeling under every word . . . This novel cuts you and then bandages you back up.”—Hillary Kelly, Los Angeles Times

“The working-class 1980s Glasgow of Douglas Stuart’s Booker Prize-winning debut Shuggie Bain is again the setting of his follow-up Young Mungo, and with it come the violence, religious tribalism, economic depression, diehard loyalties and fatalistic humor of the era, all expressed in the crooked poetry of Glaswegian dialect . . . The crafted storylines in Young Mungo develop with purpose and converge explosively, couching all the horror and pathos within a tighter, more gripping reading experience—an impressive advancement, in other words, from an already accomplished author.”—Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal

“A nuanced and gorgeous heartbreaker of a novel . . . It’s a testament to Stuart’s unsparing powers as a storyteller that we can’t possibly anticipate how very badly—and baroquely—things will turn out. Young Mungo is a suspense story wrapped around a novel of acute psychological observation. It’s hard to imagine a more disquieting and powerful work of fiction will be published anytime soon about the perils of being different.”—Maureen Corrigan, NPR’s Fresh Air

Young Mungo bridges the worlds of Stuart’s earlier novel and stories . . . Stuart writes beautifully, with marvelous attunement to the poetry in the unlovely and the mundane . . . The novel conveys an enveloping sense of place, in part through the wit and musicality of its dialogue.”—Yen Pham,New York Times Book Review

Young Mungo is a finer novel than its predecessor, offering many of the same pleasures, but with a more sure-footed approach to narrative and a finer grasp of prose. There are sentences here that gleam and shimmer, demanding to be read and reread for their beauty and their truth . . . The way that Stuart builds towards exquisite set pieces, moments in time that take on an almost visionary aspect; the powerful and evocative descriptions of sex and nature in language that soars without ever feeling forced or purple; the manner in which he binds you into the lives of his characters, making even the most brutal and self-interested members of the family somehow not only forgivable, but lovable. I sobbed my way through Shuggie Bain and sobbed again as Young Mungo made its way towards an ending whose inevitability only serves to heighten its tragedy. If the first novel announced Stuart as a novelist of great promise, this confirms him as a prodigious talent.”—Alex Preston, Guardian

“When a romance develops between two teenage boys (one Protestant, one Catholic) in a Glasgow housing project, the danger of discovery is all too real. Like Shuggie Bain, the author’s acclaimed debut, this is a raw, tender and generous story of love and survival in tough circumstances.”—People

“Exhilarating, heartbreaking . . . The book shares a few similarities with Shuggie Bain, but Young Mungo is more brutal, more suspenseful . . . An edgy, relentless urgency. The language is gorgeous, poetic, expertly evoking the dour streets of Glasgow and its people . . . Stuart shows us so much ugliness, but he offers a promise of hope, too. This book will hurt your heart, so reach for that hope.”—Connie Ogle, Minneapolis Star Tribune

“The novels share a brutality and a squirmy, claustrophobic evocation of family life. And they offer a world of exquisite detail: If a perfume creator wished to bottle the olfactory landscape of post-Thatcher-era Glasgow, all the necessary ingredients could be found in Stuart’s descriptions of sausage grease, fruity fortified wine, pigeon droppings and store-bought hair bleach . . . There is crazy greatness in Young Mungo.”—Molly Young, New York Times

“A blazing marvel of storytelling, as strong and possibly stronger than his Booker Prize-winning debut . . . As affecting, original, and brilliantly written a novel as any we’ll see in 2022 . . . From political hostilities to personal anguish, Stuart harmonizes his notes, pitch-perfect . . . There’s jazz and bounce in his sentences—his cadences are rollicking, his dialogue often comic—but also a meticulous precision . . . I felt the same frisson as when I read works by other leading innovators, among them Kevin Barry, Hilary Mantel, Arundhati Roy, Ali Smith, and Colson Whitehead.”—Hamilton Cain, Oprah Daily

“An excoriating study of how violence begets violence, a devastating story of how the abused and victimized become abusers or aggressors . . . [Stuart’s] writing is so magnificent and his young hero so endearingly, vibrantly alive that we soldier on through Mungo’s saga of endurance, weepingly inspired like watchers of a war zone, aching to assuage the survivor’s ache, yearning to rescue him from the predations of his enemies, his vindictive older brother, and finally his own darker impulses.”—Priscilla Gilman, Boston Globe

“Across the 800 pages of his two novels, Stuart has been inking a great Hogarthian print, a postmodern Scottish Gin Lane. He can be sardonically funny but he always gets back to scaring the hell out of you and breaking your heart . . . There is right now no novelist writing more powerfully than Douglas Stuart. A strong measure of his success lies in how the reader, while appreciating the artistry of each harrowing scene, continually thinks: Please let it end.”—Thomas Mallon, Air Mail

“Page-turning, beautifully written . . . In a narrative that weaves seamlessly back and forth between the camping trip and Mungo’s life before the trip, Stuart creates a world we can almost feel.”—Deborah Dundas, Toronto Star

“Readers might fear that Stuart has written the same book a second time. In several obvious ways, that is true. But Stuart makes the small differences count, of which the most important is that Mungo is older than Shuggie, and beginning to see in his sexuality not just a source of difference and alienation but a possible route to escape and emancipation . . . The tension of the romance is expertly sustained, as is the sense of the real heroism of being a star-crossed lover in a Jets and Sharks world . . . The risk of sentimentality is always there, as it was in Shuggie Bain. But Young Mungo is a braver book, and more truthful, for his having taken that risk.”—Telegraph

“Richly abundant. It spills over with colourful characters and even more colourful insults. And like a Dickens novel it has a moral vision that’s expansive and serious while being savagely funny.”—Times (UK)

“Stuart’s deft, lyrical prose, and the flicker of hope that remains for Mungo, keep the reader turning the page.”—The Economist

“The Sighthill tenement where Shuggie Bain, Stuart’s Booker Prize–winning debut, unfurled is glimpsed in his follow-up, set in the 1990s in an adjacent neighborhood. You wouldn’t think you’d be eager to return to these harsh, impoverished environs, but again this author creates characters so vivid, dilemmas so heart-rending, and dialogue so brilliant that the whole thing sucks you in like a vacuum cleaner . . . Romantic, terrifying, brutal, tender, and, in the end, sneakily hopeful. What a writer.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“The astonishing sophomore effort from Booker Prize winner Stuart details a teen’s hard life in north Glasgow in the post-Thatcher years . . . Stuart’s writing is stellar . . . He’s too fine a storyteller to go for a sentimental ending, and the final act leaves the reader gutted. This is unbearably sad, more so because the reader comes to cherish the characters their creator has brought to life. It’s a sucker punch to the heart.”Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“A searing, gorgeously written portrait of a young gay boy trying to be true to himself in a place and time that demands conformity to social and gender rules . . . Stuart’s tale could be set anywhere that poverty, socioeconomic inequality, or class struggles exist, which is nearly everywhere. But it is also about the narrowness and failure of vision in a place where individuals cannot imagine a better life, where people have never been outside their own neighborhood . . . Stuart’s prize-winning, best-selling debut, Shuggie Bain, ensures great enthusiasm for his second novel of young, dangerous love.”Booklist (starred review)

“After the splendid Shuggie Bain, Stuart continues his examination of 1980s Glaswegian working-class life and a son’s attachment to an alcohol-ravaged mother, with results as good yet distinctly different . . . In language crisper and more direct than Shuggie Bain’s, if still spiked with startling similes, Stuart heightens his exploration of the sibling bond and the inexplicable hatred between Glasgow’s Protestants and Catholics, while contrasting Mungo’s tenderly conveyed queer awakening with the awful counterpart of sexual violence. Highly recommended.”Library Journal(starred review)

“Readers will be happy to learn that Stuart’s follow-up, Young Mungo, is even stronger than his first book . . . A marvelous feat of storytelling, a mix of tender emotion and grisly violence that finds humanity in even the most fraught circumstances.”—BookPage (starred review)

“Stuart shines in familiar territory, writing profoundly about love, brutality, strength and courage.”—Newsweek

“Exploring themes of religious conflict, family tension, and the ever-present danger of attempting to live an authentic life, Stuart writes with the same power and economy of language he displayed in his debut. With characters that are exquisitely drawn and a story you won’t be able to put down, this love story goes far beyond the conventional romance.”—BuzzFeed

“Another triumph . . . With a gentleness that defies the hard-scrap poverty and social order around him, Mungo is a character you root for; Young Mungo feels both cinematic and so intimate you don’t want it to end.”—Amazon Book Review, “Editors’ Picks”

“Prepare your hearts, for Douglas Stuart is back. After the extraordinary success of Shuggie Bain, his second novel, Young Mungo, is another beautiful and moving book, a gay Romeo and Juliet set in the brutal world of Glasgow’s housing estates.”—Observer

“I wasn’t sure Young Mungo could live up to Shuggie Bain, but it surpasses it. Deeply harrowing but gently infused with hope and love. And so exquisitely written. It’s a joy to watch, in real time, as Douglas Stuart takes his place as one of the greats of Scottish literature.”—Nicola Sturgeon

“Few novels are as gutsy and gut-wrenching as Young Mungo in its depiction of a teenage boy who finds love amid family dysfunction, community conflict and the truly terrible predations of adults. Vividly realised and emotionally intense, this scorching novel is an urgent addition to the new canon of unsung stories.”—Bernardine Evaristo, Booker Prize-winning author of Girl, Woman, Other

“Some novels can be admired, others enjoyed. But it is a rare thing to find a story so engrossing, bittersweet and beautiful that you do not so much read it, as experience it. It is this quality Young Mungo possesses—an intense, lovely, brutal thing. Stuart is a masterful storyteller.”—Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Mercies

Praise for Shuggie Bain:

WINNER OF THE BOOKER PRIZE
New York Times Bestseller
Winner of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction
Named the Best Book of the Year at the British Book Awards 2021
Finalist for the National Book Award, the Kirkus Prize, the National Book Critics Circle John Leonard Prize, the PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel, the
L.A. Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, and the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction
Shortlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize
Longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal, the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction, and the 2021 Rathbones Folio Prize
The Waterstones Scottish Book of the Year 2020
Shortlisted for the Books Are My Bag Breakthrough Author Award
Named a Best Book of the Year by the
Los Angeles Times, NPR, TIME, BuzzFeed, the Economist, the Times (UK), the Independent (UK), the Daily Telegraph (UK), Barnes & Noble, Kirkus Reviews, the New York Public Library, the Chicago Public Library, and the Washington Independent Review of Books

“We were bowled over by this first novel, which creates an amazingly intimate, compassionate, gripping portrait of addiction, courage and love. The book gives a vivid glimpse of a marginalized, impoverished community in a bygone era of British history. It’s a desperately sad, almost-hopeful examination of family and the destructive powers of desire.”—Booker Prize Judges

“This year’s breakout debut . . . It has drawn comparisons to D.H. Lawrence, James Joyce, and Frank McCourt.”—Alexandra Alter, New York Times

“I’m really, really stunned by it. It’s so good. I think it’s the best first book I’ve read in many years . . . It’s a heartbreaking story, and quite hard to read at times, but it’s almost like it’s uplifting on behalf of literature. And it’s written with great warmth and compassion for the characters.”—Karl Ove Knausgaard, Guardian

“The body—especially the body in pain—blazes on the pages of Shuggie Bain . . . This is the world of Shuggie Bain, a little boy growing up in Glasgow in the 1980s. And this is the world of Agnes Bain, his glamorous, calamitous mother, drinking herself ever so slowly to death. The wonder is how crazily, improbably alive it all is . . . The book would be just about unbearable were it not for the author’s astonishing capacity for love. He’s lovely, Douglas Stuart, fierce and loving and lovely. He shows us lots of monstrous behavior, but not a single monster—only damage. If he has a sharp eye for brokenness, he is even keener on the inextinguishable flicker of love that remains . . . The book leaves us gutted and marveling: Life may be short, but it takes forever.”—Leah Hager Cohen, New York Times Book Review

“A debut novel that reads like a masterpiece.”—Bethanne Patrick, Washington Post

“A novel that cracks open the human heart, brings you inside, tears you up, and brings you up, with its episodes of unvarnished love, loss, survival and sorrow.”—Scott Simon, NPR’s “Weekend Edition”

“Agnes Bain [is] the unforgettable human train wreck at the center of Douglas Stuart’s novel Shuggie Bain . . . Titling the novel after Shuggie rather than the woman who dominates him seems like a small gesture of defiance on Mr. Stuart’s part . . . Mr. Stuart vividly inhabits the city’s singular ‘Weegie’ dialect and vocabulary . . . It’s the obstinate Bain pride that prevents this novel from becoming a wallow in victimhood and gives it its ruined dignity.”—Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal

“The domestic spaces, the blighted landscape, the meanness of people, the bullying at school, the constant threat of violence, all add up to a picture of misery. Against this, however, there is an undercurrent that becomes more and more powerful, as Stuart, with great subtlety, builds up an aura of tenderness in the relationship between helpless Shuggie and his even more helpless mother . . . By drawing Agnes and Shuggie with so much texture, he makes clear that neither mother nor son can be easily seen as a victim. Instead, they emerge forcefully; they are fully, palpably present.”—Colm Tóibín, Bookforum

“Astonishingly good, one of the most moving novels in recent memory.”—Hillary Kelly, Los Angeles Times

“The tough portraits of Glaswegian working-class life from William McIlvanney, James Kelman, Alasdair Gray, and Agnes Owens can be felt in Shuggie Bain without either overshadowing or unbalancing the novel . . . Stuart’s capacity for allowing wild contradictions to convincingly coexist is also on display in the individual vignettes that comprise the novel, blending the tragic with the funny, the unsparing with the tender, the compassionate with the excruciating. He can even pull off all of them in a single sentence . . . This overwhelmingly vivid novel is not just an accomplished debut. It also feels like a moving act of filial reverence.”—James Walton, New York Review of Books

“Rarely does a debut novel establish its world with such sure-footedness, and Stuart’s prose is lithe, lyrical, and full of revelatory descriptive insights . . . Reading Shuggie Bain entails a kind of archaeology, sifting through the rubble of the lives presented to find gems of consolation, brief sublime moments when the characters slip the bonds of their hardscrabble existence. That the book is never dismal or maudlin, notwithstanding its subject matter, is down to the buoyant life of its two principal characters, the heart and humanity with which they are described. Douglas Stuart has written a first novel of rare and lasting beauty.”—Alex Preston, Guardian

“Douglas Stuart drags us through the 1980s childhood of ‘a soft boy in a hard world’ in a series of vivid, effective scenes . . . Shuggie Bain is a novel that aims for the heart and finds it. As a novel it’s good, as a debut very good, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see it progress from Booker longlist to shortlist.”—John Self, Times (UK)

“Not only does [Stuart] clearly know his characters, he clearly loves them . . . Stuart describes their life with compassion and a keen ear for language . . . Such is Stuart’s talent that this painful, sometimes excruciating story is often quite beautiful.”—Barbara Lane, San Francisco Chronicle

Shuggie Bain is Douglas Stuart’s first novel, as intense and excruciating to read as any novel I have ever held in my hand . . . This novel is as much about Glasgow as it is about Shuggie and his impossible mother . . . The book’s evocative power arises out of the author’s talent for conjuring a place, a time, and the texture of emotion, and out of its language which is strewn with a Glaswegian argot sodden with desolation and misery . . . This is a hard, grim book, brilliantly written and, in the end, worth the pain which accompanies reading it.”—Katherine A. Powers, Newsday

“With his exquisitely detailed debut novel, Douglas Stuart has given Glasgow something of what James Joyce gave to Dublin. Every city needs a book like Shuggie Bain, one where the powers of description are so strong you can almost smell the chip-fat and pub-smoke steaming from its pages, and hear the particular, localized slang ringing in your ears . . . It turns over the ugly side of humanity to find the softness and the beauty underneath . . . This beauty, against all odds, survives.”—Eliza Gearty, Jacobin

“An atmospheric epic set in 1980s working-class Glasgow, Shuggie Bain, a debut novel by Douglas Stuart, focuses on the relationship between a mother and son as she battles alcoholism and he grapples with his sexuality. It’s a formidable story, lyrically told, about intimacy, family, and love.”Elle

“A dysfunctional love story—an interdependence whose every attempt to thrive is poisoned whenever a drink is poured—but here, between a boy and his mother. Stuart’s debut stands out for its immersion into working-class Glaswegian life, but what makes his book a worthy contender for the Booker is his portrayal of their bond, together with all its perpetual damage.”—Maria Crawford, Financial Times

“Magnificent . . . Its richly rendered events will give you a lot to talk about.”O Magazine

“This is a panoramic portrait of both a family and a place, and Stuart steeps us fully in the grim decline of the Thatcher years: cheap booze, closed pits and lives lived on tick . . . Tender and unsentimental—a rare trick—and the Billy Elliot-ish character of Shuggie, when he does take the floor, leaps off the page.”—Stephanie Cross, Daily Mail

“Terrifically engrossing . . . A cracking coming-of-age story—a survivor’s tale you won’t be able to put down.”—Anthony Cummins, Metro

“A heartbreaking story about identity, addiction, and abandonment.”TIME

“An instant classic. A novel that takes place during the Thatcher years and, in a way, defines it. A novel that explores the underbelly of Scottish society. A novel that digs through the grit and grime of 1980s Glasgow to reveal a story that is at once touching and gripping. Think D.H. Lawrence. Think James Joyce . . . A literary tour de force.”Washington Independent Review of Books

“Douglas’s sharp narrative perspective moves from character to character, depicting each internally and externally with astute grace, giving a complex understanding of the dynamics of the Bain family . . . Shuggie Bain is a master class in depicting the blinding dedications of love and the endless bounds to which people will go to feel in control, to feel better. It hopefully sets the tone for more beautifully devastating works of fiction to follow from Stuart in the future.”Columbia Journal

“Heartfelt and harrowing . . . [A] visceral, emotionally nuanced portrayal of working class Scottish life and its blazingly intimate exploration of a mother-son relationship.”Literary Hub

“The way Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting carved a permanent place in our heads and hearts for the junkies of late-1980s Edinburgh, the language, imagery, and story of fashion designer Stuart’s debut novel apotheosizes the life of the Bain family of Glasgow . . . The emotional truth embodied here will crack you open. You will never forget Shuggie Bain. Scene by scene, this book is a masterpiece.”Kirkus Review (starred review)

“Compulsively readable . . . In exquisite detail, the book describes the devastating dysfunction in Shuggie’s family, centering on his mother’s alcoholism and his father’s infidelities, which are skillfully related from a child’s viewpoint . . . As it beautifully and shockingly illustrates how Shuggie ends up alone, this novel offers a testament to the indomitable human spirit. Very highly recommended.”Library Journal (starred review)

“Douglas Stuart’s anxious novel is both a tragedy and a survival story. Shuggie is as neglected as Glasgow, but through his mother’s demise, he discovers his strength. Shuggie Bain celebrates taking charge of one’s own destiny.”Bookpage

“Stuart’s harrowing debut follows a family ravaged by addiction in Glasgow during the Thatcher era . . . There are flashes of deep feeling that cut through the darkness . . . Will resonate with readers.”Publishers Weekly

“There’s no way to fake the life experience that forms the bedrock of Douglas Stuart’s wonderful Shuggie Bain. No way to fake the talent either. Shuggie will knock you sideways.”—Richard Russo, author of Chances Are

“Every now and then a novel comes along that feels necessary and inevitable. I’ll never forget Shuggie and Agnes or the incredibly detailed Glasgow they inhabit. This is the rare contemporary novel that reads like an instant classic. I’ll be thinking and talking about Shuggie Bain—and teaching it—for quite some time.”—Garrard Conley, New York Times-bestselling author of Boy Erased

“A rare and haunting ode to 1980s Glasgow and its struggling communities, Shuggie Bain tells the story of a collapsing family that is lashed together by love alone. Douglas Stuart writes with startling, searing intimacy. I fell hard for these characters; when they have nothing left, they cling maddeningly—irresistibly—to humor, pride and hope.”—Chia-Chia Lin, author of The Unpassing

Shuggie Bain is an intimate and frighteningly acute exploration of a mother-son relationship and a masterful portrait of alcoholism in Scottish working class life, rendered with old-school lyrical realism. Stuart is a writer who genuinely loves his characters and makes them unforgettable and touching even when they're at their worst. He’s also just a beautiful writer; I kept being reminded of Joyce’s Dubliners. I loved this book.”—Sandra Newman, author of The Heavens

“A dark shining work. Raw, formidable, bursting with tenderness and frailty. The effect is remarkable, it will make you cry.”—Karl Geary, author of Montpelier Parade

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Grove Press (April 5, 2022)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 400 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0802159559
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0802159557
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.25 x 1.25 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 9,276 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
9,276 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the storytelling powerful, gripping, and riveting. They praise the writing quality as poetic, lyrical, and romantic. Readers describe the book as amazing, compelling, and the greatest work of literature ever written. They also find the story heartbreaking, sad, and cruel. They describe the beauty as brutal and breathtaking. Customers also appreciate the rich characters and unique thoughts.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

37 customers mention "Storytelling"34 positive3 negative

Customers find the storytelling powerful, gripping, and visible. They say the story is spectacular, riveting, and heart-pounding. Readers also mention the individuals are believable and relatable.

"...-class, queer Romeo and Juliet story, but much darker - was familiar yet unique, and it hooked me from the very first page...." Read more

"...makeup, especially Mungo’s, making the individuals real and believable...." Read more

"...There is also a nail-biting suspense novel that clutches the gut with some very violent and difficult pages to read. It's an incredible book." Read more

"...story captures so many of the things I had gone through that it feels so relatable. It is beautifully written...." Read more

29 customers mention "Writing quality"23 positive6 negative

Customers find the writing quality of the book poetic, beautiful, and romantic. They say the author is capable of writing very lyrical and romantic prose.

"...The writing was gorgeous, reading Stuart’s style felt like watching a movie and some of the phrases he used will stay with me for a long time...." Read more

"...Stuart proves himself capable of writing very lyrical and romantic prose when he turns his attention to the growing relationship between Mungo and a..." Read more

"This is a beautifully written novel that so beautifully grabs the exacting, crushing pain of that first love of a young gay relationship...." Read more

"...It is beautifully written. I choose to believe that Mungo and James ended up together." Read more

27 customers mention "Heartbreaking story"20 positive7 negative

Customers find the story heartbreaking, incredibly emotional, and cruel. They describe it as a beautiful tale that goes straight through their hearts.

"...It’s a heart-wrenching, heavy novel that manages to find glimpses of joy and love in a sea of bleakness...." Read more

"...Stunning beautiful, achingly brutal, goes straight through your heart. I could not put it down and found myself shouting "Nooo!"..." Read more

"...Here's a cruel yet beautiful tale that'll make you hide and break your heart.Read this book I dare you.Not for the faint of heart...." Read more

"...At times, the book is so heart-breaking to read, but you continue to pull for the young hero that he can pull himself out of his tough life..." Read more

27 customers mention "Readability"27 positive0 negative

Customers find the book amazing, compelling, and a masterwork of literary fiction. They say it's emotional challenging but worth it.

"...TLDR: Young Mungo is an extraordinary, powerful novel about difficult family relationships, queerness, masculinity, and finding tenderness in very..." Read more

"This book is a masterpiece. Stunning beautiful, achingly brutal, goes straight through your heart...." Read more

"...It's an incredible book." Read more

"...made the difference between me thinking this is the greatest work of literature ever written and thinking “ I could have stopped and pick this up at..." Read more

16 customers mention "Beauty"16 positive0 negative

Customers find the book brutally beautiful, breathtaking, and beautifully written. They say it grabs the exacting, crushing pain of that first love.

"This book is a masterpiece. Stunning beautiful, achingly brutal, goes straight through your heart...." Read more

"This is a beautifully written novel that so beautifully grabs the exacting, crushing pain of that first love of a young gay relationship...." Read more

"...I recommend this book because it is so beautifully done, but at least know what you’re in for; I didn’t and I fell completely out of the spell that..." Read more

"...A lovely, lovely work of art. I will say very little about the story. I would have hated it if someone had told me anything before I read this...." Read more

16 customers mention "Character development"14 positive2 negative

Customers find the characters rich, unique, and thoughtful. They also say the secondary characters are much better written.

"...The characters were so memorable and fascinating, so well-developed, that I couldn’t help but feel very strongly about every single one...." Read more

"...The characters are well-drawn and you can visualize them while reading. I highly recommend this book which is soon to be a TV series." Read more

"...descriptions and characters are gloriously realized, and the milieu is both intriguingly foreign and..." Read more

"...Then this books for you. This author is a genius and I'm happy that he speaks the truth...." Read more

8 customers mention "Pacing"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the pacing of the book good, deft, and sure. They say the writing moves them along swiftly. Readers also mention the book is extraordinary, powerful, and brutal.

"...TLDR: Young Mungo is an extraordinary, powerful novel about difficult family relationships, queerness, masculinity, and finding tenderness in very..." Read more

"...The construction of YOUNG MUNGO is extremely skilled...." Read more

"This book is a masterpiece. Stunning beautiful, achingly brutal, goes straight through your heart...." Read more

"...But Douglas Stuart's writing is deft and sure and moves you along so swiftly that you don't realize you've entered into a raging rapid of emotion..." Read more

Dark and emotional.
5 out of 5 stars
Dark and emotional.
This book wrecked me up. I have not read Douglas Stuart previous book but I imagine Shuggie Bain is as heartbreaking as this one. Set in 1990s Glasgow, we follow Mungo, named after Glasgow’s patron saint, the youngest son of an absent alcoholic single-mother known as Mo-Maw (short for Monday-Thursday Maureen) - her AA name - and his other two siblings, Hamish and Jodie.The novel evokes the tensions between Protestants and Catholics, depicting poverty and violence during Margaret Thatcher government. Mungo is struggling to survive in working-class Glasgow. His mother often disappears, his older brother is a gang leader, and his sister, who ends up taking care of him and being responsible for household, is a teenager herself. It is in this dysfunctional family that Mungo grows up.Trying to find his place in the world, to be loved and cared for, Mungo meets James, his friend and lover. They are aware of all the difficulties they will face if they decide to stay together, not only because of their same-sex relationship but also because Mungo is protestant and James is Catholic. And then one day Mo-Maw sends Mungo to a fishing trip with two men she barely knows from the AA (once more showing her lack of care or responsibility towards her children), with the excuse it was for Mungo’s “own good”.As a mother, it broke my heart seeing these kids growing up in depravation, lacking love and affection, how Mo-Maw manipulated Mungo’s feelings, and seeing how his family did not accept the fact he was gay. The cover of the book is astounding and tells a lot about this story. Young Mungo is dark, emotional, brutal but tender, and not an easy read. It is about love, sorrow, survival, loss, and hope.Content warnings for death, violence, alcoholism, sexual violence, homophobia. This is a fenomenal novel that torn me apart. I can’t recommend this book enough.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2022
Young Mungo is the second novel from the 2020 Booker Prize winner, Douglas Stuart. It’s a gritty, heartbreaking story set in working-class Glasgow in the post-Thatcher years. The main character, Mungo, is a 15-year-old boy living with his alcoholic mother, abusive brother and a genius sister. Mungo and his family are Protestant and when he meets and falls for James, his neighbor who not only is male but Catholic, it becomes very clear that their love is more than forbidden - it’s dangerous.

I am absolutely blown away by this book. It reminded me of Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life: a Great Gay Novel, except Young Mungo doesn’t focus on the elites and there’s much less trauma - which is not to say that it doesn’t have it at all. It’s a heart-wrenching, heavy novel that manages to find glimpses of joy and love in a sea of bleakness. It’s sad, yes, but it also makes space for hope, and that’s a big part of how satisfying it felt to read it. Since English isn’t my first language, accents written out in dialogue can be tricky and make reading a book more difficult, but although Stuart uses that technique here, I found the dialogue easy to follow and understand. The writing was gorgeous, reading Stuart’s style felt like watching a movie and some of the phrases he used will stay with me for a long time. The plot - a working-class, queer Romeo and Juliet story, but much darker - was familiar yet unique, and it hooked me from the very first page. The characters were so memorable and fascinating, so well-developed, that I couldn’t help but feel very strongly about every single one. It wasn’t always love, though - some characters in Young Mungo are the most despicable people I have ever read about. Mungo himself was my favorite - a gentle, scared boy searching for warmth and love.

TLDR: Young Mungo is an extraordinary, powerful novel about difficult family relationships, queerness, masculinity, and finding tenderness in very hard places.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2024
The tale of young Mungo is littered with the harsh brutality of life yet on the edge's brief but intense moments of beauty gives rise to a hope that there might be an escape. I gasped, held my breath and wanted to shield Mungo as his awakening unfolded.
Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2023
Jodie said he was gullible. Mo-Maw said she wished she had raised him to be cannier, less anybody’s fool. It was a funny thing to be a disappointment because you were honest and assumed others might be too. The games people played made his head hurt.

Scottish-American writer Douglas Stuart’s first novel, SHUGGIE BAIN, was published in 2020 and won the prestigious 2020 Booker Prize. In his second novel, YOUNG MUNGO (2022; 400 pp.), Stuart returns for a second time to a Glasgow setting, this time to the 1990s to tell the story of another struggling working-class family, centering his story on the youngest child, fifteen-year-old, Mungo Hamilton. [To a degree, both Shuggie and Mungo’s childhood in Glasgow echo Stuart’s own.] His father dead, Mungo lives in a cramped home in a housing project with his alcoholic mother, Mo-Maw (she refuses to allow her children to address her by any form of the word mother because she feels she is too young for that), who often disappears without notice for weeks in search of male companionship and/or drink—or both. Mungo’s five-year older brother, Hamish, is a threatening, callous boy who revels in his manliness and toughness which he does not hesitate to take out on his younger brother. For Hamish, his physical strength is his sole source of respect—both for others and for himself. Jodie, the middle child who is a year-and-a-half older than Mungo, tries to hold the family together but finds herself disgusted by Mungo’s wasted love for his mother and eagerly looks forward to the day when she can leave the family and their poverty behind and make something of her life. She is the only character in the book who dares speak the truth about situations and others out loud.

YOUNG MUNGO begins with the boy on a week-long fishing and camping trip arranged by Mo-Maw with two adult men, “St. Christopher” and “Gallowgate,” who she knows virtually nothing about, having met them at an AA Twelve Step Program meeting. She is convinced the experience will help her young, quiet, remote child become more “manly.” For nearly fifteen years Mungo’s innocence and reticence has been seen as a weakness and something which needs to be corrected out of fear of where it might lead. The fishing trip, however, is dreadful mistake in so many ways.

To say YOUNG MUNGO is nothing short of brilliant hardly does the work justice. Stuart’s writing is all-encompassing and vivid. Descriptions of both the housing project and Glasgow itself as well as nature: the woods, wildlife, the ruins of an old castle, and the loch where Mungo and his two adult custodians camp and fish are richly on display. The author concentrates on and reveals his characters’ psychological makeup, especially Mungo’s, making the individuals real and believable. It is especially impossible to read the novel and not feel the boy’s sentiments of being utterly alone with no help available to him and not wanting to take Mungo by the hand and assist him with his pain—both the emotional and physical—he continually encounters throughout the book.

The author uses Scottish dialect and words throughout the novel (which might throw some readers off until they get used to it, but most of the unfamiliar vocabulary will be distinguishable from its context). And although the feel of Scotland, especially among the less educated and poorer population permeates the novel, Stuart writes about universal themes with which every open-minded reader will be able to identify.

Toxic masculinity is ever present in Hamish as well as others. As a gang leader, Hamish and his troupe find street fighting, especially fighting Catholics to be “about honour… territory… reputation…” Although most American readers are likely to associate England and Ireland as hotbeds of religious hostility, Stuart makes it clear the same heated antagonism between Catholic and Protestant was/is to be found in Scotland. Indeed, religion stands in the shadow at the foundation of much of the intolerance or lack of acceptance of those who are different, people like Mungo who gets labeled “a dirty wee poofter… a filthy little bender” as well as does an older, single, lonely neighbor of his, Chickie Calhoun, who is shunned by nearly all.

Raw, unwarranted violence suddenly and repeatedly flares up in the story as it does sadly nearly everywhere in the world today. More youth than we will ever know face crushing, loveless, desperate home lives and face the same kind of intolerance much as does Mungo.

The construction of YOUNG MUNGO is extremely skilled. From the early hours of the camping trip in the wild, Stuart whisks readers back four months or more to earlier events. For the remainder of the novel Stuart moves the story’s timeline back and forth, providing small revelations but never giving readers Mongo’s full story until the very end of the book. It makes for suspenseful as well as anxiety-inducing reading at times.

Stuart proves himself capable of writing very lyrical and romantic prose when he turns his attention to the growing relationship between Mungo and a slightly older neighbor, James Jamieson. The similarities between the two boys are striking. James’s mother is dead and his dad is often away working on an oil rig at sea. Suffering from loneliness, James turns to raising pigeons on a rooftop doocot. The budding relationship between the two youths force both to take risks like never before and their halting, cautious approach toward each other is deftly told. There is danger not only in their budding romance being socially unacceptable, but because James is Catholic while the Hamiltons are Protestant. They are encircled by those who would destroy anything the two might create and give to each other.

Stuart’s narrative will keep readers hypnotized and apprehensively awaiting the outcome of the tale to the very last page. The author’s writing is superb—far more than one would expect from most second novels. Despite the seemingly endless agonizing moments in Mungo’s life with only brief lyrical although often confusing respites with James, Stuart delivers his material without sentimentality and with occasional specks of humor. Readers will, surprisingly, finish YOUNG MUNGO engulfed in a sense of love and hope and the realization of what survival in the face of adversity really takes. YOUNG MUNGO is a novel which can change a person’s outlook on the world and their own life to the better—if the reader will permit and embrace such a possibility.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2023
This book is a masterpiece. Stunning beautiful, achingly brutal, goes straight through your heart. I could not put it down and found myself shouting "Nooo!" and the likes at the pages the more intense the story got, the same way you would watching an movie that had you completely drawn in. Stuart's writing and prose - the way he can bring a whole environment, culture and characters to life for you in a language that seems so his own reminds me of the unique storytelling skills of iconic greats like Toni Morrison and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. I have now purchased 'Shuggie' Bain and cannot wait for Douglas Stuart to tell more stories! Highly highly recommend!
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Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2023
This is a beautifully written novel that so beautifully grabs the exacting, crushing pain of that first love of a young gay relationship. So perfectly layered with the social and religious taboo of a society that can be so harsh against homosexuality and the discovery of an inner strength that is fueled by an ardent shared love that makes nothing else matter. There is also a nail-biting suspense novel that clutches the gut with some very violent and difficult pages to read. It's an incredible book.
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2024
Not as depressing as Stuart’s “Shuggie Bain,” but another tale of lower class Glaswegian louts, alcoholism, and a sensitive young gay man stuck among them.
The horrors that descend upon young Mungo make this a difficult read. Caveat Emptor.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2024
You almost have to take breaks from time to time to gather yourself from spiraling into a place of profound hurt for this boy’s lot in life. It was somewhere mentioned he was christlike. Most definitely so. There are kids like Mungo trapped by seemingly inescapable circumstance in all parts of the world. I wish they all make it out before it’s too late.
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Bruno Dias
5.0 out of 5 stars Clima de suspense e mais feliz do que Shuggie Bain
Reviewed in Brazil on September 12, 2024
Young Mungo, segundo romance de Douglas Stuart, conta a história de um escocês protestante de 15 anos que se apaixona por um jovem católico. Os dois criam planos para fugir da cidade, mas alguns fatores, como sua mãe alcoólatra e sua idade, deixam Mungo hesitante. Ao mesmo tempo, ele precisa evitar que sua família, especialmente o irmão mais velho, descubra seu segredo.

O livro é realmente incrível e até melhor do que o romance de estréia do autor. Isso, porque diferentemente do primeiro, o qual foca na relação do Shuggie com a mãe, este segundo dá destaque para o protagonista, para o seu descobrimento como homossexual e para o seu primeiro amor. Aqui, felizmente, temos momentos felizes, que permitem ao leitor respirar um pouco, ao contrário de Shuggie Bain, onde só há tragédia.

A trama toda traz um ar de suspense por intercalar o momento atual da viagem de pesca do Mungo com eventos que aconteceram anteriormente. O final é cheio de tensão, de modo que, até a última linha, o leitor fica apreensivo com o desfecho dos eventos. Essa última linha, aliás, é de tirar o fôlego, então não seja a pessoa que lê o último parágrafo do livro antes de iniciá-lo, a não ser que você deseje ganhar um spoiler.

Um ponto negativo, no entanto, foi o autor ter reciclado vários elementos da sua primeira obra, como o alcoolismo, o bullying, o abuso sexual, a forte ligação do protagonista com a mãe tóxica. Até mesmo a configuração familiar do Mungo é igual à do Shuggie. Por enquanto essas repetições foram aceitáveis, mas espero que Douglas Stuart traga novos elementos em seu próximo livro, para que suas histórias não fiquem repetitivas e ele se mostre um autor flexível, capaz de escrever para além de suas próprias experiências quando criança.

Um aviso para os leitores que não possuem inglês como idioma principal: o livro conta com muitos termos do escocês, além de diálogos escritos na maneira escocesa de pronunciar. Inicialmente isso exige um pequeno esforço, mas eventualmente a leitura fica fluente.

Ainda assim, Young Mungo é um romance maravilhoso, cheio de momentos incríveis, e eu recomendo para todos!
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Bruno Dias
5.0 out of 5 stars Clima de suspense e mais feliz do que Shuggie Bain
Reviewed in Brazil on September 12, 2024
Young Mungo, segundo romance de Douglas Stuart, conta a história de um escocês protestante de 15 anos que se apaixona por um jovem católico. Os dois criam planos para fugir da cidade, mas alguns fatores, como sua mãe alcoólatra e sua idade, deixam Mungo hesitante. Ao mesmo tempo, ele precisa evitar que sua família, especialmente o irmão mais velho, descubra seu segredo.

O livro é realmente incrível e até melhor do que o romance de estréia do autor. Isso, porque diferentemente do primeiro, o qual foca na relação do Shuggie com a mãe, este segundo dá destaque para o protagonista, para o seu descobrimento como homossexual e para o seu primeiro amor. Aqui, felizmente, temos momentos felizes, que permitem ao leitor respirar um pouco, ao contrário de Shuggie Bain, onde só há tragédia.

A trama toda traz um ar de suspense por intercalar o momento atual da viagem de pesca do Mungo com eventos que aconteceram anteriormente. O final é cheio de tensão, de modo que, até a última linha, o leitor fica apreensivo com o desfecho dos eventos. Essa última linha, aliás, é de tirar o fôlego, então não seja a pessoa que lê o último parágrafo do livro antes de iniciá-lo, a não ser que você deseje ganhar um spoiler.

Um ponto negativo, no entanto, foi o autor ter reciclado vários elementos da sua primeira obra, como o alcoolismo, o bullying, o abuso sexual, a forte ligação do protagonista com a mãe tóxica. Até mesmo a configuração familiar do Mungo é igual à do Shuggie. Por enquanto essas repetições foram aceitáveis, mas espero que Douglas Stuart traga novos elementos em seu próximo livro, para que suas histórias não fiquem repetitivas e ele se mostre um autor flexível, capaz de escrever para além de suas próprias experiências quando criança.

Um aviso para os leitores que não possuem inglês como idioma principal: o livro conta com muitos termos do escocês, além de diálogos escritos na maneira escocesa de pronunciar. Inicialmente isso exige um pequeno esforço, mas eventualmente a leitura fica fluente.

Ainda assim, Young Mungo é um romance maravilhoso, cheio de momentos incríveis, e eu recomendo para todos!
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Nathaniel
5.0 out of 5 stars hard to recommend
Reviewed in Canada on May 18, 2022
Brilliantly written. Each character is so vividly defined and the story is compelling, but riveting and repulsive at the same time. The plot cleverly zigzags in time and ultimately writhes towards its disturbing denouement; the final paragraph left me feeling like the oxygen had been sucked out of the room.
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L. PM
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic!
Reviewed in Germany on September 17, 2024
I highly recomment this book. It's a real page turner. Once you're into the story, you won't be able to put it down.
D. A. Heggie
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful - A must read for everyone
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 28, 2024
"Young Mungo" is a raw and tender exploration of love, identity, and survival set in 1990s Glasgow.
The novel follows Mungo, a Protestant teenager grappling with his sexuality, who forms a forbidden friendship with James, a Catholic boy from the same rough neighbourhood.
Stuart captures the gritty reality of working-class life with a compassionate, unsparing gaze, painting a vivid portrait of the struggles and resilience of his characters.
The narrative moves between moments of intense violence and fragile beauty, showcasing Stuart's gift for storytelling with emotional depth and nuance. "Young Mungo" is a compelling, heart-wrenching novel that lingers long after the final page.
Ivan Garcia Sanchez
5.0 out of 5 stars Good
Reviewed in Spain on June 23, 2024
Good