How to write about a book that has made such a big splash that it has already been extensively reviewed. What more can one say? This is what I'm facing with Douglas Stuart's debut and Booker Prize-winning novel, Shuggie Bain.
I haven't, in fact, read much about it, because I prefer to come to books fresh, but I have heard an interview with Stuart, and I can imagine what has been written about his book. I have also discussed it with my reading group. All I can do is just launch in, and write what I would normally write, but I fear it won't add anything fresh to the discussion. It will, however, record, for me, my thoughts and feelings.
The story
For those of you who haven't yet read Shuggie Bain, it tells the story of its eponymous protagonist growing up in public housing in 1980s industrial Glasgow. This was the time of Thatcher, a time when mines, shipyards, railyards closed, resulting in significant unemployment and the usual fallout when men can't work and women and children end up on welfare:
Whole housing estates of young men who were promised the working trades of their fathers had no future now. Men were losing their very masculinity.
This is important, but it is also just the backdrop for the personal story of Shuggie and his mother Agnes. There are other characters, but these two are the book's core.
The story starts in 1992 with Shuggie, nearly 16, living on his own in a boarding house in Southside Glasgow. He is clearly pitied by the people around him, so the question for us is why is he there alone, how did he get there? We then go back to 1981, where we meet Shuggie's family, thirty-nine-year-old Agnes, her second husband Shug, and Shuggie's two older siblings, Catherine and Leek, who were born to Agnes' first husband. It is not a happy situation. They are all living in a flat with Agnes' parents, Wullie and Lizzie, and Agnes feels a failure.
When Shug does take his family away, it's a cruel action, and Agnes and her three children soon find themselves alone, living on welfare payments in the desolate Pithead - a housing scheme which had "the plainest, unhappiest-looking homes Agnes had ever seen". She knew Shug was "a selfish animal", but she wasn't expecting this. From here, their lives are a struggle, though Agnes - now drinking heavily - tries her darnedest to maintain appearances amongst women who reject her and her airs.
The characters
Agnes' airs! Stuart has an impressive ability to create vivid, real characters. Even the villains of the piece - like Shug - are recognisable as people beyond the "type", in his case a macho, violent, womaniser, they represent. This is no mean feat. However, it's Agnes, Shuggie and, to a degree, Leek, who are our focus.
Agnes is a woman with aspirations. She's resourceful, when sober, and wants more than the life she's been dealt. But, she is unable to find a way out, largely because, for women of her time and place, it seems that a man is the answer. Her first husband Brendan tries to buy her happiness, but he's boring. Then the flashy Shug comes along. For all his failings, and they abound, he too tries to buy her happiness, but tires of all her "wanting".
Unfortunately, one of the things Agnes wants is "to take a good drink". Her drinking, which was already evident when they lived at her "mammy's", becomes a serious problem at Pithead. Life, for her children, becomes insufferable. Catherine skedaddles into an early marriage as soon as she can, while the sensitive, artistic Leek withdraws into himself, leaving the young Shuggie to be the main watcher over his mother. And this is where this novel's credentials as autofiction come into play, because the evocation of the child-addict parent relationship reads so authentically. We can't help admiring Agnes' gallus, while also despairing for her and her children.
So, it's a heartbreaking story. Not only does Shuggie struggle with his addicted mother - loving her, caring for her in ways that a child should never have to - but he must cope with his own outsiderness that he doesn't understand. From a very young age his way of talking, dressing and walking, not to mention his disinterest in typical boy things, are ridiculed. He's called names, beaten up, ostracised, and he doesn't know why. At 10 years old, aware he's "no right", he asks his mother, "What's wrong with me, Mammy?" If she knows, she doesn't tell him, but a few years later, he realises that Leek, who had tried to teach him to toughen up, had known all along.
Leek is the support act, figuratively and literally, to Shuggie and his mother. He quietly provides support in the background, even after he eventually leaves home. He's resentful of the impact on his own ambitions to become an artist, but he sticks around, taking labouring work, because he is needed. In many ways, he's the hero of the novel, and my heart went out to him as much as to Shuggie. This, I think, says it all:
he looked like a half-shut penknife, a thing that should be sharp and useful, that was instead closed and waiting and rusting.
The writing
It also gives you a flavour of the book's expressive writing. One of the first things you might notice is that Stuart loves a simile. The book is full of them, but they are so good, like
"The auld man's face crumpled like a dropped towel."
and
"The unwelcome presence of a man was like a school bell."
and so many of Agnes, such this when Shug leaves her
"Agnes, sparkling and fluffy, was lying like a party dress that had been dropped on the floor".
The book is also well structured, opening in 1992, which immediately tells us that whatever happens Shuggie is going to survive, and ending back in 1992, this time on a note of hope, albeit a tentative one.
Stuart uses vernacular extensively, resulting in much unfamiliar-to-me vocabulary - boak, hauch, gallus, to name a few - but they are understandable from the context, and essential to setting the scene. The novel is not at all hard to read. Indeed it's beautiful - and easier to understand than some spoken Scottish can be!
Moreover, for all its bleakness, the novel has a good smattering of humour. Here's Shuggie defending his mother, drunk and over-dressed, marching into the hospital to see her dying father,
Shuggie heard the nurse say to a male attendant that she thought for sure Agnes was a working girl.
"She is not," said Shuggie, quite proudly. "My mother has never worked a day in her life. She's far too good-looking for that."
What it all means
The novel is, as I've said, autobiographical, but that doesn't mean that Stuart simply sat down and wrote his life. Shuggie Bain reads as a considered piece of fiction that has some things to tell - about dashed dreams, the powerlessness of woman in a male-dominated world, poverty, addiction and outsiderness. It's both political and personal about what happens to lives when the ground beneath is taken away. And yet, for all that, it's also about love - child-to-mother, brother-to-brother, friend-to-friend - that survives in places you barely expect it to. No-one in my reading group was sorry we scheduled it.
Douglas Stuart
Shuggie Bain
London: Picador, 2020 (2021 eBook)
355pp.
ISBN: 9781529019308
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