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, BookPage , BookBrowse , 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 Times , Time , Vogue , Guardian , 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 bec.