The second powerful and heart-rending novel, set in 80s Glasgow, from Douglas Stuart, Booker Prize Award-winning author of Shuggie Bain.
Douglas Stuart was born and raised in Glasgow. After graduating from the Royal College of Art, he moved to New York, where he began a career in fashion design. Shuggie Bain, his first novel, won the Booker Prize, the Sue Kaufman Prize of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and 'Debut of the Year' and 'Book of The Year' at the British Book Awards. It was also shortlisted for the US National Book Award for Fiction, the Kirkus Prize and the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize. His short stories have appeared in the New Yorker and his essay on Gender, Anxiety and Class was published by Lit Hub. He lives in New York.
A touching story of forbidden love pursued in the face of sectarian
violence with a plot that unfolds with all the urgency and dread of
teenage yearning
*The Times/The Sunday Times, ‘Books of the Year’*
Stuart follows his Booker-winning Shuggie Bain with another tale of
a Glasgow boy whose mother is an alcoholic. This time, however,
it’s a love story, with Protestant-Catholic sectarian tensions in
the background; Mungo and pigeon-fancier James are star-crossed
lovers in a Jets and Sharks world. The tension of their romance is
expertly sustained.
*The Daily Telegraph, ‘Books of the Year’*
Again Douglas Stuart proves himself a wonderfully gifted writer . .
. Young Mungo is the work of a true novelist.
*The Guardian*
A dazzling modern masterpiece . . . a book of clear, honest, often
dazzling intent and integrity
*Evening Standard*
The profundity of Stuart’s exceptional writing comes, then, partly
from his commitment to the truth that even amid deprivation,
compassion persists. This is most fully and beautifully expressed
in the relationship between Mungo and his fellow lonely adolescent
Catholic James . . . It is no exaggeration to say that I read the
final pages through floods of breathless tears.
*Independent*
There are sentences here that gleam and shimmer, demanding to be
read and reread for their beauty and their truth . . . 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.
*The Observer*
Stuart [is] a virtuoso describer with a more or less infinite
supply of tender detail and elegant phrasing . . . Mungo’s
predicament is piercing, and as the story draws to a close, a
spectral beauty prevails.
*The Guardian*
Captures a world of suffering and sectarian violence with writing
of transcendent beauty
*Financial Times*
A rich and affecting group portrait of loneliness. Every character
. . . is horribly alone . . . Stuart’s book feels 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.
*The Sunday Times*
Young Mungo seals it: Douglas Stuart is a genius . . . [He] writes
like an angel.
*The Washington Post*
If you adored Shuggie Bain . . . Young Mungo will please you on
every page. If you didn’t, what’s wrong with you?
*Los Angeles Times*
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.
*The New York Times*
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