About the Book
The stunning new novel from the Booker Prize-winning, Sunday Times-bestselling author of Shuggie Bain and Young Mungo, read by Scottish actor Lorne MacFadyen.
An Oprah's Book Club pick
"Lorne MacFadyen narrates Stuart’s extraordinarily beautiful novel of love, secrecy, loneliness, and pride in a voice rich with the accents of the Outer Hebrides." Kirkus
Out of money and with little to show for his art school education, John-Calum Macleod takes the ferry home to the island of Harris to find that not much has changed except for him. In the windswept croft where he grew up, Cal resumes his old life, caught between the two poles of his childhood: his father John, a sheep farmer, weaver, and pillar of their local Presbyterian church, and his Glaswegian grandmother Ella, who has kept a faltering peace with her son-in-law for decades.
While Cal wonders if any lonely men might be found on the barren hillsides of home, John is dismayed by his son’s long hair and how he seems unwilling to be Saved. As the seasons pass, everything is poised to change as the threads holding together the fragile community become increasingly entangled.
'This summer's bestseller' - The Times
'This book is special' - Colm Tóibín
'Passionate, liberating, and gorgeous' - Min Jin Lee
'Brilliant and rare' - Ann Patchett
'A masterpiece' - Elaine Feeney
'A fierce, glorious sting of a novel' - Lauren Groff
John of John is the heartbreaking story of a young man’s return home and how the bonds of family life are torn by the weight of expectation. It confirms Douglas Stuart as one of the great British writers at work today.
About the Author :
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 and both '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, among many other awards. His second novel, Young Mungo, was a number one Sunday Times Bestseller. His short stories have appeared in The New Yorker and his essay on gender, anxiety and class was published by Lit Hub.
Review :
John of John has the emotional range and sense of sympathy of his earlier books, but this book is special, it has an urgency, an immediacy, a brilliant sense of place, the drama of fierce emotion repressed, concealed and volcanically exposed.
To read John of John is to move to the Isle of Harris and take up residence in the family croft. The novel is so immersive, so all-encompassing, that I felt like I was living in it. Douglas Stuart has written something brilliant and rare
You finish the novel feeling emotionally enriched and slightly bereft at leaving its characters behind. Few contemporary novelists produce prose so vivid, generous and full-bodied . . . It is difficult to imagine this year’s Booker shortlist without it
Set against the stark beauty of the Hebrides, where the landscape, in all its colour and texture, is as alive and commanding as its people . . . No one crafts characters with the depth and precision of Stuart—John of John is a masterpiece
John of John is another mesmeric, transportive, vividly sensory and astonishingly textured novel from one of our greatest writers
John of John is a fierce, glorious sting of a novel. Douglas Stuart has somehow lifted the rocky, windswept landscape of the Scottish Western Isles—as well as its externally stark and thwarted, if internally blazing, characters—and replicated both with utter flawlessness on the page. What an astonishing feat of literary fiction
Stuart renders father and son — their whole community on the far side of nowhere — with the acuity of an anthropologist and the bittersweet sympathy we reserve for our dearest, most confounding loved ones
In John of John, Harris is a character in its own right. Stuart is masterful in evoking the landscape, culture and traditions of the place . . . I was captivated. John of John is Douglas Stuart’s most consummate work of literature to date
A superb example of what a novel can do . . . I'd give him another Booker right away
Douglas Stuart explores the visible and invisible chains of love forged between a parent and child — as each grapples with his respective faith and complex humanity. Stuart’s characters yearn and yield tenderly as they struggle with fate and free will. The inimitable world of John of John is passionate, liberating, and gorgeous
A modern masterpiece from a British titan . . . A capacious, ambitious novel, both swiftly readable and genuinely profound. In an era when reading is on the decline, fiction of this much generosity and depth might, I think, be our culture’s own way to salvation
Powerful and surprising . . . Stuart is not just a very good writer but an immensely skilled storyteller
Proves Stuart is a first-class talent . . . An incredibly touching, surprising novel. You’ll have to be patient, though, it’s not published until May
John of John is Douglas Stuart's finest novel yet, and that is saying something . . . he infuses his narrative with an authentic understanding of the essence of Hebridean identity; he creates a novel that has the grandeur of classical literature but the readability and relatability of a contemporary masterpiece . . . Epic and intimate, this is the kind of novel that enlarges your very capacity for empathy
It’s evocative, devastating and full of heart, with Stuart's signature way of making you want to read a single sentence again and again
Themes of desire and duty, inheritance and duty are woven as expertly as the tartan John produces, and Stuart’s gift for descriptions often feels miraculous . . . This beautiful story of literal and metaphorical homecoming is wholly satisfying
Breathtaking, life affirming, transcendent storytelling. John of John shows Stuart to be a true and abiding talent
Douglas Stuart's best novel yet
It's his finest work yet . . . John of John” is one of 2026’s literary triumphs; Stuart ups his game with fluency and confidence
A masterpiece. Every page is intimate and alive and offers tenderness with bruised knuckles. I finished it wrecked, in the best way. Cal, John, Innes and Doll will stay with me for a long time. This is Stuart at full stretch - I can't stop thinking about John of John
I love this book so much
A sprawling, emotionally rich saga that extends Stuart’s investigation into masculinity while sketching a world in which his gay characters come fully, finally alive. It’s his best yet
Intimate yet epic in scale, it contains equal parts pastoral drama, tale of familial fracture, love story and inquiry into various forms of loneliness
This striking queer coming-of-age story is set in a Scottish village of sheep farmers and weavers. Home from art school to help his family, Cal Macleod thinks he’s the only one with a burning secret. He could not be more wrong
Told in beautiful, thoughtful prose that transports readers to lives and locales they will never know
But it’s his empathic understanding of his characters and his deep exploration of their feelings that makes John of John so impactful. Rarely can a novel set on such a small scale have seemed so epic.