The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
Booker Prize for Fiction
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2020 Booker Winner: Shuggie Bain

It is a desperately moving, heartbreaking book: one which places hope and despair, love and brokenness on the same page, treating them with equal weight and empathy.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

It is a desperately moving, heartbreaking book: one which places hope and despair, love and brokenness on..."
This... I just read your review and some others and immediately ordered it. I will find the time and headspace to read this.

- several boxes of tissues
- a Glaswegian slang dictionary (I think for anyone UK based they would know enough to pick it up)
- a strong historical dislike for Margaret Thatcher (and her terrible assault on the industrialised working classes) also assists.



Its like a different world and a very different accent
The characters in the book even pick up different Glaswegian accents (that bit is beyond me)


My children’s grandfather grew up in Glasgow, he was a charming wee man who was quite a brawler and with stories of a very rough childhood in Glasgow.
Little family trivia: their other grandfather, my dad, grew up in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.

I second that request. Online seems slim pickins on a quick glance.
Wiktionary seems to have decided all of Scotland goes in one bag and it seems full of fairly obvious words.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Append...
I also tried to see if there was an "urban dictionary" for Glasgow, but I failed to find one.
This is the one I've used before for one or two words here and there, but I can't imagine it would work for a whole book full: http://www.glasgowvant.com/glaswegian...
There must be an actual book, so any help would be appreciated.


Those links will be more than fine Ella particularly the second . Although it’s a little weak. As an example - flittin’ is a key concept in the book but the dictionary definition in that link misses the undercover nature of it. Just Googling “what is flittin” works better.
I would not want to over emphasise the dialect in this (my initial post was more to get in this, the tissues and Thatcher as a quick summary of the book).
Firstly the actual narration is not in dialect (albeit it has some slang scattered around) - it’s only some of the dialogue.
Secondly it’s a long book so I think one quickly gets the ear for it.

Ye may lay yer plans aforehaun',
Days afore it gin ye care,
Ha'e the cheenie nately packit,
An' the wa's a' strippit bare;
The chair-bottoms tied thegither,
An' the extra bed taen doon;
But ye're no' much faurer forrit
When the flittin' day comes roun'.
Comes with a glossary at http://www.rampantscotland.com/poetry... although they've decided flittin' needs no translation
Although I always thought of "moonlight flittin'" as the more undercover (of darkness) version
I am looking forward to this one - it does sound very like James Kelman, but that is not a bad thing - Kelman got a pretty rough deal from the London media but was never as difficult to read as people made out.


Gumble's Yard wrote: "I think the difference from Kelman is I thought that had the narrative in dialect (I may be wrong). This is very different if that is the case."
Yes, but the dialect was never difficult for anyone who has met a few Glaswegians. Compared to Nan Shepherd's 1920s rural Aberdonian it was pretty easy.
Yes, but the dialect was never difficult for anyone who has met a few Glaswegians. Compared to Nan Shepherd's 1920s rural Aberdonian it was pretty easy.

True. And I think I have met more Glaswegians than my husband has (I am hardly exaggerating!!!)

It is a desperately moving, heartbreaking book: one which places hope and despair, love and brokenness on the same page, treating them with equal weight and empathy"
Ella wrote: This...
Thanks Ella - the author liked that description also which was nice.








As fate would have it, when the longlist was announced this was the only book I could read immediately, and so I started it. I wasn't particularly interested -- it looked like a tale of agony and woe that I wasn't sure I could handle it if it seemed to simply revel in despair -- though GY's positive thoughts helped me realize I should withhold judgment.
I'm only a quarter of the way through it, but I think Stuart is a superb writer. Yes, there is a lot of agony and woe in these pages (and I don't expect that to suddenly change in the remainder of the book), but what's striking is how much yearning and pathos there is underneath the pain. I find that a very humane and, perhaps strangely, positive perspective. In other words, as much despair as there is, and as much abuse -- physical and psychological -- as there is, Stuart is not simply recounting gloom. He has a way of providing a kind of punchline that fits well while also pushing back on the dread; and these function to humanize the characters as well.
Anyway, I'm surprised at how much this book is already affecting me and am excited to let Stuart continue to do his work.
I'm only a quarter of the way through it, but I think Stuart is a superb writer. Yes, there is a lot of agony and woe in these pages (and I don't expect that to suddenly change in the remainder of the book), but what's striking is how much yearning and pathos there is underneath the pain. I find that a very humane and, perhaps strangely, positive perspective. In other words, as much despair as there is, and as much abuse -- physical and psychological -- as there is, Stuart is not simply recounting gloom. He has a way of providing a kind of punchline that fits well while also pushing back on the dread; and these function to humanize the characters as well.
Anyway, I'm surprised at how much this book is already affecting me and am excited to let Stuart continue to do his work.

Yes, you say it very well there. I feel, perhaps unfairly, that many books that try to explore these kinds of relationships, particularly when set inside economic hardships, get the despair without any of the other elements you mention (hope, love, and brokenness, even, which I find humanizing here rather than pathetic); if they contain these elements, they feel false and sentimental, unearned. But man here it's quite beautiful for exactly the reasons you mentioned.



I finished Shuggie Bain and thought it was special and very well written. I need to collect my thoughts on it for a proper review, but I'm glad the Booker brought this one to my attention.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lg8K_...

I also liked how the queer aspect is handled in the novel.
Not entirely sure what keeps me from upgrading the 4.5* to 5 stars – it was a touching and memorable story that at times resonated strongly. Time and perspective will tell. There are some promising titles still to be read from the longlist.

Part way through, it occurred to me that this is the second book I have read this year where the book's title is the name of a son but the book itself is more the story of a mother called Agnes.
(The other one is Hamnet, in case you are wondering).


Douglas Stuart did a beautiful job of showing us the pain, humiliations, deprivation, and squalor of poverty in post-industrial Glasgow, life in the tenements, and most importantly life as the child of an alcoholic without making caricatures of the people in Shuggie’s world.
It’s a moving, heartbreaking, hopeful story and without reading the others yet, I would be happy if it won, though that could be the immediate afterglow of having just finished it.
If the audio book is narrated by a Glaswegian I know I wouldn’t understand it! I think most of the slang was fairly easy to figure out by the context.

https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/1...




I am not surprised to learn the book is semi-autobiographical. Something about the tangible details of life with an alcoholic rang distinctly true to me even though I don't have that experience. And while a gifted writer could accomplish that through deep research and empathy, given that this is a debut novel it would have been a true feat for it not to be based in fact.

https://www.edbookfest.co.uk/the-fest...
Great question at the end.

I agree it would be a challenge for someone to write about the daily indignities and challenges of loving an alcoholic mother that well without experiencing it. Writers do it all the time of course, but Stuart captured something that made the book special, at least to me.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Little Life (other topics)On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous (other topics)
Shuggie Bain (other topics)
Cleanness (other topics)
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Shuggie Bain, by Douglas Stuart
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