The Oprah Podcast - Douglas Stuart: “John of John” | Oprah’s Book Club
Episode Date: May 5, 2026As part of the 30th anniversary of Oprah’s Book Club, Oprah picks her 123rd selection: John of John by celebrated Scottish author Douglas Stuart. His other novels include Young Mungo and Shuggie Bai...n which won the prestigious Booker Prize in 2020. John of John is set in a small, fictional farming and textile town, Falabay, on an isle off northern Scotland where everybody knows everyone’s business. The story centers around three generations living under the same roof: a father, his son and the son's grandmother. The central theme to this enthralling book is the secrets these three so desperately hold on to: secrets from each other, from their neighbors and from the church. A love story at its heart, Douglas Stuart tells Oprah how he spent six years writing this book, spending 16 weeks researching the Outer Hebrides Isles on the northwest coast of Scotland talking to local people who inspired his 26 supporting characters. Oprah and Douglas Stuart are joined by an audience in New York City who enthusiastically read the book and have questions for the author. BUY THE BOOK! https://groveatlantic.com/book/john-of-john/ 00:00:00 - Welcome Douglas Stuart, author of “John of John” 00:03:01 - The setting of the book 00:04:05 - Where he found this story 00:07:30 - What Douglas needed to learn to write “John of John” 00:09:20 - Douglas describes “John of John” 00:11:43 - Oprah compares the book to Heated Rivalry 00:13:30 - An unexpected love story 00:17:40 - The conflict between father and son 00:20:40 - His writing process 00:25:55 - Father and gay son on “John of John” 00:30:30 - How man found acceptance of his son 00:34:20 - Feeling seen in a novel 00:38:27 - What Douglas wants the reader to feel 00:44:50 - Masculinity and the patriarchy 00:46:10 - The experience of growing up gay 00:47:20 - The end of the novel Follow Oprah Winfrey on Social: Instagram Facebook TikTok Listen to the full podcast: Spotify Apple Podcasts #oprahsbookclub Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Oprah as an Oprah entry.
Aha.
Is there any other Oprah?
I'm calling about John of John.
John of John.
Oh my God.
I'm calling because I want to choose it as a book club.
Oh my God, that's amazing.
You must have had some people hang up on you
for the years not believing it was really you.
This is a real pinching moment.
I thought this was so interesting in light of heated rivalry
and all that's going on with that.
If you like heated rivalry, you're going to love this book.
All right?
That's all I got to say.
This is the deeper end of the ocean of heated rivalry.
Hi, everybody.
I am so happy to be here with you on the Oprah podcast
because today is my favorite kind of day
because I'm with an audience of reader.
We are all reading people.
And I know that book clubs are all the rage now.
And when I first started doing it,
nobody had a book club, and the idea of doing a book club, certainly publicly, was like,
how are you going to get people to read? And now, look, everybody has a book club. I'm 30 years in,
and I'm so excited to share with you my 123rd Oprah's book club selection.
123. John of John by the extraordinary novelist Douglas Stewart. You may have read or heard of his wildly acclaimed debut novel.
Shuggy Bain, that was so good, which won the prestigious Booker Prize.
But I was so immersed in this book that at times I had to put on a sweater.
Because Scotland gets cold sometimes.
And so we gave our audience an advance copy, and I wanted to know what you thought.
Allison?
Thank you for having me.
Thank you for this book.
You wrote with such a thoughtful and delicate hand that these complex characters,
truly became human.
I was lucky enough to spend a year in Scotland,
and through reading this book, I was transported back.
Really? So you knew the terrain?
Yes, I had been up to the Isle of Sky and to the Highlands before.
So you knew what a Croft House was?
No, I didn't know that, but I had run around and chase sheep around the hillsides.
Okay, all right, Susanna?
Your characters were so well-developed.
I got to the end of the book, and honestly, I was disappointed to leave them.
I could have easily spent another 400 pages with John, Cal, Ella, and Innes.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
So John of John is set in a small, fictional farming and textile town.
Didn't you learn so much about textiles?
Yes.
And Douglas is wearing one of the Scotland textiles.
I am.
Very hot for a studio, but yes.
Okay.
So it's set in this town called Fala Bay where people do these textiles on an aisle off of Scotland,
where everybody knows everybody else's business.
It's a story about a father, John,
and his son, John Calam, who goes by Cal,
and the secrets they so desperately are holding on to
from each other, from their neighbors, from their church.
Boy, this book has a lot.
Everybody has a secret.
So we welcome you, Douglas Stewart.
Bravo, Bravo, bravo, bravo, sir.
Thank you. And thank you for having me.
Well, you know, I asked an author this recently,
and they said, I wrote the book that was inside me to write.
So has this book, the words been living inside you, this story?
Was it living inside you?
And obviously came out in the form of John of John.
But how did it come about?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I think it's always been inside.
I mean, I think in many ways it was inevitable.
Although I'm not an islander myself, I think I had been drawn to the islands
because I was a young man who had studied textiles in college.
And I'd always really revered this community that makes this beautiful cloth and I had wanted to go.
But before I published my debut novel in 2019, it takes about 18 months between someone accepting a book and then it being published.
And I was thinking, what am I going to write next?
What do I want to work on?
And I think I was making my husband absolutely insane with my anxiety.
How will this book do?
What's going to happen?
And so I said to him, I have to go.
I'm being called to the islands.
I have to go and see what it is.
And he said,
So had sugar bean already come out?
No, it hadn't.
It still had maybe about six months to go.
And so I was thinking, I was trying to keep myself busy with my work.
Because also the pressure, once you've had the success of a Booker Prize,
it puts even more pressure on you, does it not, for the next book?
Or do you feel that pressure?
Oh, I mean, I didn't feel the pressure before the book published, but certainly afterwards.
Yeah.
Now you got it really right.
Yeah.
And in fact, journalists would say, congratulations.
And is your next book going to fail?
You know, it was sort of more success.
Like failure was baked into success,
and you couldn't even enjoy the moment.
So I said to my husband,
I want to go and explore the Outer Hebrides,
which is this beautiful archipelago
off the northwest of Scotland.
I had never been.
And he was like...
But you sound like you have.
And he said, absolutely, go.
You know, he was delighted to get rid of me.
So where were you born?
Where were you born, race?
I was born, so Scotland's quite a small country,
but I was born in Glasgow,
which is the big industrial city,
and actually the most populous city.
So I was born and raised as an inner city kid.
And because I was born, my family didn't have much money,
I never really got to see all the beautiful wildlife and the highlands
and the nature that Scotland has.
And I certainly never got to visit our many, many beautiful islands.
And I've lived my whole life.
As soon as I open my mouth, someone would say,
oh, I've been to the Isla Sky or I've been to the Isla Harris.
And I would say, oh, I haven't. I haven't done that.
And so this also for me was about writing myself into my own country
and sort of discovering my own nation in a way.
And so I went for 12 weeks in 2019,
and it was before I'd published my debut novel,
I knew two people on the islands.
I actually only knew one,
and I had been introduced to another.
And, you know, everyone was just so warm and so welcoming with me.
Did you stay there? Did you live there?
I did. I started, it's a chain of islands,
and I started at the very southern tip,
and I thought I was going to write a novel about loneliness,
and then I thought maybe it's about a prodigal son's return home.
And as I traveled up, all the islands are very different.
They have a very different character.
And when I got about three quarters of the way up to the Isle of Harris,
I suddenly was on the east coast of it.
And it's a very lunar landscape.
It's very rocky, quite barren.
The houses feel quite lonely on the landscape.
Yeah.
Because I think, and you all would agree, I'm sure,
the setting in the book is the character itself, is it not?
Yes.
Yeah.
I mean, it's absolutely stunning.
The beaches and the landscape and the houses are incredible.
But it's also a place where some very singular things converge.
one of them is the Gallic language.
Another one is a very devout form of Calvinism,
and the last is Harris Tweed weaving.
And as soon as I got there,
I just suddenly thought, this is it.
This is where the book is set.
So you actually saw people doing that weaving
that you describe it in the book?
I did. They do it in their homes or behind their homes,
and I absolutely fell in love.
But I only knew two people, as I said,
and I had to know everything about,
learn everything about sheep farming
and about the reproductive cycles
and about when you can launch a boat
and when you can.
So I would go and I would say, if I needed to know something, they would say, yeah, yeah, just go and talk to the person at the far end of the village.
Just go chap the door.
And as a New Yorker, I didn't like that as a strategy.
But I did.
And I was admitted and I came away with over 100 hours of audio recordings, just people talking to me.
And what were they sharing?
They were sharing about what was going on in their daily lives.
If you stayed there a long period of time, you became to understand yourself, you know, how isolated or?
or removed. I know people don't like the word, they use remote, but how isolated or removed it was
and how it did feel when I was reading that there was a lot of loneliness there. I think my characters
experience a lot of loneliness. You know, there's a wonderful quote that opens the novel,
and it's by a very famous Protestant minister, and he says, you know, islanders the world over are
born for exile. Islands give us such a privileged childhood, but then when we grow up, they give us
no place to express that. And I think that was a, you know, a very sort of powerful feeling that I
got when I was on the islands. They have suffered some massive depopulation over the last century.
They've lost about 40% of their population. And the population often that is there in the more
rural corners can be aging. Older. Yeah, because the young people want to get out.
Yeah, they do. And so there's a little bit of pre-grief with parents as well. You know,
they understand that if their children are going to go out into the world, they have to give
them to the world and won't see them as often as they'd like.
So without giving the plot away, especially,
you know, you're not going to give the ending away.
My producer was in tears reading it.
We all were so moved by the ending, but you got to get there.
Tell us about John of John.
Yeah.
It's set in the late 90s on the Isle of Harris, but...
And you did that on purpose.
I did that on purpose.
I set that before the internet, which will become clear as you read the book.
Because if everybody was on their phones, this would be a very different story.
different story. Yeah, exactly, exactly. If you could find someone to date really quickly,
it would be, yeah, yeah. Wouldn't even be a short story. Yes. No need to knit your penis.
Spoiler alert, yeah, exactly. Yeah, exactly. Well, you could still do that if it's fun for you,
but yeah. But yeah, and so it's a story of a young man who is on the mainland and at art school.
His name is John Callum McLeod. We call him Cal. And in that wonderful moment of graduation, he is
down on his luck. He can't find work, and he's having a tough time getting by in the capital city.
And he calls home every Wednesday and Sunday to worship with his father back to the Isle of Harris.
And one day his father says to him, you have to come home. It's time. And it's that wonderful
moment where a young man should just be going out into the world, and suddenly he's pulled back to his home.
And so he returns to this island, which is quite difficult to get to. It takes a lot of intent.
And he's told his grandmother is very ill, and he must come home and care for that his grandmother is his
responsibility because it's his father's mother-in-law, not his father's mother. And so he does his duty
and he comes home and it brings him back into a world where he has a lot of broken relationships and
unfinished business. But it also brings him back under his father's roof. And his father is what is
known as a deacon or a presenter in the local church, meaning he sets the hymn and the congregation sings
it back to him. And he believes very deeply in scripture. He does not negotiate with it. And he has
very sort of strict rules for the house. And so Cal comes home. He finds, I don't think it's a spoiler,
he finds almost instantly that his grandmother is in great health. And so she's the same as she ever
was. So he's been falsely lured back home? For some reason that we will discover, yes. And Cal is
coming home with a secret. That's right. And he goes home and his dad also has a secret. That's right,
yes. We're not telling the secrets? We can tell the secrets, I think. Okay. Because it's really
early on that you find out.
That's right, yeah.
And I thought this was so interesting in light of heated rivalry and all that's going on with that.
If you liked heated rivalry, you're going to love this book.
All right.
That's all I got to say.
This is the deeper end of the ocean of heated rivalry.
And so Cal is gay and holding the shame of that for himself because he knows he's not going to be
received in that community.
That's right.
And his father, the deacon, is gay.
That's right.
Yes.
But you find that like 20 pages in.
That's what is happening.
He's coming home to that.
And then all that happens with that.
That's right.
And strangely enough, I thought it was really just the story of a gay son returning to the islands.
And when I was meeting with islanders, I would go from settlement to settlement.
And in every sort of little village, I would hear the history of who lived there.
And there would be some spinsters or there would be some bachelors, some unmarried older people.
and I would ask, you know, oh, sort of what happened.
And the conversation often was that person missed their moment for love.
You know, they just didn't find somebody to love.
They missed their moment.
Sometimes the story would be, oh, he looked after his mother and father into old age
and or, you know, he really didn't want to be bothered with the opposite sex.
And I was listening to this for like a couple of weeks.
And then I would say, and I said very casually, well, of course, some of them must also be gay.
And the woman that I said it to said, oh, no, oh, no, no, no.
And she didn't say it with any cruelty or malintent,
but because faith was very important.
They couldn't believe that.
And I knew just instinctively in my hearts
that some of these men and women,
these older men and women,
would have been gay and just had never fun.
You can't have a whole town.
No.
And not have anybody.
That's exactly so.
Yeah.
You just can't.
You just cannot.
And that's when the book for me
became much more interesting.
I realized it wasn't really about the son,
but it is also about his father
and what we inherit from our parents.
Okay.
So that's when you decided to,
allow him to be gay and also the father, who is the deacon, is holding this secret.
Now, what is interesting to me is I started out reading it, and I didn't know that I was
reading a love story, but it becomes very evident that it's a love story. It's a love story
in ways that we did not expect. Did you know that yourself, that it was going to be a love story?
Yeah, I do. I think in all my novels, no matter what I throw up my characters, I'm always
testing the strength of the love,
whether that's between a mother and son
or two teenage boys, or in this case,
between a grandson and grandmother and a son and a father,
and also the patience of love for some other characters.
But yeah, I always knew it was going to be a love story.
I didn't have a father myself.
My father abandoned my mother and I when I was about four years old.
And so I've always grown up thinking,
what must it be to have a father's love?
And what would that have been?
And what would it have meant for me as a young gay man as well?
who had the father that I did have, you know,
was really a product of the patriarchy.
And I always sort of spent time imagining that.
And the way I wrote John of John to sort of breathe life
into that idea and to imagine these two on this island.
But, you know, of the title, the important word on the title is the of.
Because it is about how fathers possess sons
and how they often seek to control them.
When you're on the island, you know, names are very common.
Family names repeat.
There's a lot of McDonald's and McLeods and McNeils.
And then you're often named after your father and mother.
And so the very first question someone might ask you is, you know, who are you?
But then the very next question needs to be, and who do you belong to?
And that sense of who do you belong to was something that can carry an awful lot of weight
through your whole entire life because you've also got to show up and represent yourself in a good light,
but also all the generations going back
because everybody remembers who you're from.
Yes, and that's the pressure that Cal feels coming home
that you're not allowed to be yourself.
And that's also why I'm sure so many people leave the island
for the desire to fulfill who you were meant to be
and not to be somebody else's idea of who you are.
That's right, that's right, yeah.
And also for a 22-year-old man to come back,
the island does have a very busy city
or a very busy town of about 8,000 people.
But they live, it's quite a big island,
and they live in a very rural part of it.
And for a 22-year-old man to return home at that time,
he says, a couple of chapters in,
he meets another character.
He says, you're the first person I've seen under 30,
and he's been there a while.
And so there is also a little bit of a social
and a romantic struggle,
even for straight people on the islands,
to find the person that they will fall in love with,
and almost impossible in that time for a gay character.
Okay, so a thread throughout the story is this struggle between faith and desire.
What did you find in that struggle?
Faith and desire.
Yeah.
I mean, I think it's an eternal struggle, isn't it?
And I don't know that I could necessarily come to a place where I could resolve it
because I think it will go on long beyond this novel.
You know, it is a community that believes very deeply in God.
And when you're on the landscape and you see the wind and the weather and the sea,
you can understand that God is here.
We're very close to it, unlike we often are in cities.
But it is also a very conservative church,
and it does, as I said,
it believes very deeply in Scripture
and does not negotiate with it.
And so to be gay or to be outside of any relationship
that is not one man and one woman
is just not something that really can exist.
And yet you have these two men
and probably other people in rural situations like that,
that have, this is how they were born,
this is how they were made.
And so the struggle becomes not,
not only sort of with the community,
but it also becomes inside self.
It's about how can you both love God
and love yourself and love who you love.
And how can you reconcile those things at the same time?
I love it on page 23,
where you describe the conflicting relationship
between father and son.
You say, although he never said it out loud,
John felt that Cal thought their lives were lacking,
as if the things that had sustained him as a boy bored him now.
Cal's gaze tainted the things that John had always loved
and made him feel like he should apologize for the life he had built.
And you later write,
John thought about the life that he had tied himself to
so that Cal had something to tie himself to.
And now that Cal didn't want it,
he realized that he hadn't wanted it either.
Yeah.
Yeah, I have, I think I have a lot of empathy for parents, I think.
I think often they build lives and perhaps there comes a moment where you realize your children
don't want that life or they don't want to continue that life for you.
And especially on the islands where the crofting or the farming is about subsistence.
It's not for profit.
It's about maintaining and remaining and living there.
So if your child then doesn't want this thing that you've sort of held onto the house and the land
all this time, you have to question, did you also want it?
And John hasn't been able to be the man he wanted to be
because he was the upstanding deacon in this.
In this settlement, there's only 26 people, Oprah.
You know, it's not, it's very depopulated at this point.
And so he feels like he owes not only his existence there
to his son and also to his mother-in-law to keep her alive and well,
but also to the people around them.
You know, at a certain point, you cannot leave
because the community needs you.
So this struck me, this is early on,
this is just on page two, y'all.
You write about John and Cal and you say their conversation was always censored, missing the things they couldn't talk about.
And what's fascinating to me about that and struck me is that I think a lot of people are in relationships having conversations that are censored missing the things that you really can't talk about.
And it felt like that wasn't just John and Cal.
It felt to me like that's the whole community.
Everybody's just having conversations,
but really missing the things that come from feeling
and that you need to talk about.
That's right.
I think we're always all managing reputation,
no matter who we are and where we are.
First of all, let's just talk about that sentence.
That is a beautiful sentence.
Thank you. Thank you.
And so you're just writing along.
And that sentence just comes to you?
Yeah.
I sort of do a little more crumptuble.
and sort of struggling than just writing along.
But yeah, I mean, I have a love of language,
and it's very much in Scottish people, I think.
We love a good story, so.
So, but when you finish that sentence, did you say,
ha, that's a good one?
No, you tend to think, oh, that's terrible,
and, you know, will I ever survive?
Really?
Yeah, yeah, I'm very hard on myself.
Yeah, what's your writing style?
Do you get up and write every morning,
or you're on a computer, you know?
I'm very slow.
The first draft tends to be very quick,
and then I'm meeting people as the reader meets people.
And the reason why I write, I think,
is also to understand the things that bother me
that I can't quite locate.
You're meeting people as the reader as we?
Yes, they're also coming to me,
or they're coming from inside me.
But I also know in my first draft that I meet Ella and I meet Call
and I say, who are you?
And what are you going to be?
What do you have to tell me?
And so does that come through your fingers
or they're talking in your head?
How does that show up?
It comes through my head.
I mumble.
I talk all the time.
I write in a one-bedroom apartment in the East Village,
and I have a pair of noise-canceling headphones,
and my husband just goes about his business around me all the time.
Yeah.
But yeah, I meet the characters on the first draft,
and then I find it what it is that bothers them.
This always fascinates me with all.
So they just sort of like come in and they say, hi, I'm Ella?
Yeah, yeah, they do.
I have a vague outline of who they might be,
but if you try to impose too much of that on them,
they can resist it and they can push back.
And I think because so many of them come from a place where they're trying to help me work out my own problems
and things that sort of malformed me in my childhood, I am sort of drawing them from a very deep place.
So in this book, 26 characters, they just kept coming and coming.
Yes. It's a noisy head. What can I tell you? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Did you finally say, is that everybody?
Yeah. I had to limit 26, so I was like, thank goodness for depopulation.
Yeah.
Yeah. Time for a quick break. Up next, we're going to hear from Bookworld.
readers, including a pastor who once wrote in his journal how much he hated homosexuality.
He's now here with his gay son. Their story gets to the heart of what it means to change your
mind. That is next. Welcome back to the Oprah podcast. We're celebrating 30 years, 30 years people,
of Oprah's Book Club, my book club. I'm so thankful to all the readers who have joined me along the way.
I'm talking to award-winning author Douglas Stewart, whose latest novel, John of John,
is a vivid, captivating must-read and is giving some heated rivalry vibes.
Also, it's my 123rd book club selection.
Let's get back to our conversation.
So John is a man of God, as we read in John of John.
He has deep struggles between faith and desire, and this is what Cal says about his father on page 279.
Oh, I love this so much.
I didn't leave him. I left home. I didn't leave him. I left home. And he left me first.
He looked at me and he looked at Jesus and he chose Jesus. He stepped beyond that white cloth to be saved and left me on the other side.
I was nine years old. So I'm chained to his side in this life, but to hell with me and the next.
What did you learn and experience yourself about the church in Scotland?
Yeah, I think I went to the islands with a lot of misconceptions and preconceived notions.
I've always felt a sort of looked down upon, I think, of people of faith because I was a young gay man.
And it was often used as the justification for people to be cruel to me, you know, how God felt about me.
And they felt very sort of righteous and that often.
And so I went actually a little afraid this being the most conservative.
part of Scotland. And I got there and I was so overwhelmed with the softness and the gentleness
of the people with just how generous they were with me and with their neighbours and how interdependent
they were in order to sort of get by and to survive. But the faith they believe in their own
path to God is quite a hard path. You know, we're born in sin. We are going for damnation and
God will save only a few and we can give ourselves to Jesus but there's not much else.
we can do to.
And no radio on Sunday.
Yeah, no.
I mean, they are very, I mean, it's a hard agricultural life.
And so the Sabbath comes as a very welcome relief at the end of the week where everyone can rest.
But it is intended that you give your whole day to God.
There is no labor.
There is no joining together unless it is for worship or to go to church.
And even though not everyone is a part of the church on the islands, the church still has the
dominating influence in that region. And to be there also on a Sunday, as a city dweller,
I was like, we might need this, you know, might need a chance to stop and to think and to reflect
for whatever it is we do. But it's, it is a very sort of dominating experience.
You know what it felt like to me in meeting it? It feels, and I was brought up, you know,
strict Baptist. And it's so interesting because at one point, you know, you're not supposed to
wear pants on a Sunday, you're not supposed to wear jewelry, you're not supposed to do,
and, you know, it just seems so crazy to me.
You could go in the water, but you couldn't splash, you know?
So it was like, take away all the joy, and that's what it felt like in this community,
that religion was joyless.
I think it's, the religion is hard.
The road to belief there is very, very hard.
But the community itself has a lot of joy.
because it is very sort of soft and gentle, like I said.
And people are very measured with their words because words live a long time on the islands.
And so it was that sort of tension between both of them that just really sort of inspired me
and scratch my imagination.
Okay, so maybe you've heard of this story that last year in the New York Times opinion piece,
Timothy White wrote an article title,
How My Dad Reconciled His God and His Gay Son.
His father is an evangelical pastor who had very very important.
eventually came to terms with Timothy's sexuality,
and Timothy and his father, Bill, are here,
and they both read John of John.
Yeah, and what did you think?
Oh, wow.
Well, first of all, wow for that article.
Yeah.
Wow for that article.
Thank you.
I mean, I think for me, it was heartbreaking,
honestly, to see myself in it as much as I did.
I mean, we have a different, Timothy and I have a very different relationship
than John and Cal.
Thank goodness.
We would not be sitting.
Well, tell us first a little bit.
Summarize what you said in the opinion piece in New York Times, yes.
Yeah, so I wrote about what it was like to grow up as someone who had a father that loved him very dearly
and placed a lot of expectations about what it would mean when I was an adult, the wife I would marry.
I wrote about how in the doorway every night when I went to bed, my dad would say prayers over me.
One of those prayers was for my future wife every night.
And so then when I came out and in the lead up to me coming out,
my dad and I were very close.
He was going through this internal theological struggle this whole time
about what it was like to try to reconcile his deeply held evangelical faith,
faith that I was raised in and believed as well with my burgeoning sexuality.
And I read that, Bill, in your journal you wrote,
I think deep down I hate homosexuality.
I hate it more than just about anything in the world.
That's what you had written, right?
Yes.
that's in my journals.
And after more than two decades,
you now say having a gay son
is one of the best things
that's ever happened to you.
It is. It is.
You have been redeemed.
What happened to?
I mean, it's a...
I mean, speaking as someone who's, you know,
I love Jesus.
I think Jesus is the best.
I still do.
It's hard to change.
It's hard to change deeply ingrained
religious beliefs.
Yeah.
And so for me,
My brother came out as gay in 1990.
So I'm reading this book and it's, you know, that's the same era.
And I sent my brother a book called Coming Out of Homosexuality, like How to Be Straight.
Right.
I mean, this is, I prayed with, you know, I've been in ministry.
So when your brother came out, what was your reaction to your brother coming out in 1990?
Well, fortunately, I said, I love you.
Unfortunately, I said, but.
I love you, but I'm not so sure what I think about you being gay.
Because at that point, I thought it was just an abomination.
Because I didn't literally know any gay people.
I mean, it just was not part of the conservative evangelical world that I lived in.
Yeah.
So I had to go on this journey.
So that was really brave of your brother to come to you, evangelical pastor and do that.
He pastored me through my journey.
Even though he would say he's not religious, he literally walked with such humility
and grace for decades.
Okay. So when you wrote that in your journal all those years ago,
I hate homosexuality. I hate it more than just about anything in the world.
What were you going through and why were you writing that?
Well, I was praying for people who were gay to be straight.
And you thought you could pray them straight.
Yes.
Okay.
And that didn't work so well.
Yeah, well, it...
So, I mean, I had no surprise to you, but it was to me.
And so for me, it could.
caused me to doubt God.
Like, God, you said that I'm supposed to do this and make them straight,
but you're not coming through.
And so for me, it was almost-
So when they didn't turn straight, you then started to question God.
Yes.
OK.
And so I knew Timothy was gay probably a year before he came out.
Yeah.
And so that's when I wrote that.
I'm like, this cannot be.
That now my son is gay, my brother was gay.
And I heard that you went to the beach and you were throwing things and yelling at God.
I mean, I was saying things that we cannot say on Oprah.
And I was crying and yelling and throwing sand and stones out at the, and I was like, God, why?
So what happened?
So what happened to change you?
It's slow.
Change is slow.
But I think my therapist and I were talking about it a couple of weeks ago, that it's this combination of pain and love that motivates change.
And I did not want to lose my beloved boy.
And that's what it happened.
didn't lose him. No, I didn't. No. I thought I was going to because that's what it happened with
everyone else I loved who was gay. Okay. So you saw yourself in the character John here.
I did. He was so rigid. Yeah. I mean, I know he loved Cal, but he was so rigid and so shame-based.
There was so much self-loathing that the wrestling match, and you had that great line. You know,
the wrestling match wasn't with another. It was with myself. That's right. And with the God
that I thought was the real God.
And Jesus
ends up being a lot better
than I thought he was.
I love that.
And you say that because Jesus
allowed you
to be accepting
and loving of your son
just the way he was born to be.
I think so.
I mean, yes, because Jesus was that kind of loving
with others and Jesus was like,
hey, come on, come over to my side.
Yes. It's okay. You can love him. You can really love him. God was not mad at me for being mad at God. Right? So I was learning how to suppress that. God has a lot going on. Yeah. Pretty true. Yeah, pretty true. So reading this book did what for you, Timothy? How did how did the book impact you? I found the whole experience profoundly frustrating, I would say, in a way where I was just like, oh, you both have the same same.
secret for the whole time.
Like, someone say something.
Yeah.
It felt like like Chekhov's gun where if you see a gun at the beginning of the play,
it has to go off by the end of the play.
And I was like waiting and waiting and waiting for that gun to go off.
And I think what it did for me, there was a line near the end where Cal and John are talking
and Cal is saying in narration thinking, like, if he would only apologize just once,
if he would just say that he was wrong one time, like we could make something of this.
And so what it brought up for me is just my.
profound gratitude that I got to experience something that very few children, very few gay children
get to experience, which is their parent changing and largely changing out of a reaction of love
for them. And so, yeah, I was grateful. Yeah, that's wonderful. And I think you change because
you change because of your love for your son. It was so important for you to reconcile that that's why
you change. And that day, I mean, that day at the, at the beach, I mean, I just told God I said,
Look, I'm done. This is it. I'm going to die on this hill. You are not going to let my son
drift off and not let us part. So did it come to you in a feeling of release or relief?
No, of intense anger. No, but I mean, when you finally were able to reconcile that I can love my son
the way Jesus wants me to love my son. Oh, boy, just a long, slow journey. Yeah, a long
slow journey. Wonderful. Thank you. Thank you for being here to share it. Bill and Timothy.
this break, a former professional baseball player who says Douglas Stewart's novel, John of John,
made him feel seen for the first time. His coming out story and more questions from our audience
are next. This episode of the Oprah podcast is brought to you in part by Booking.com. If you're
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Welcome back to the Oprah podcast. I'm joined by an audience full of readers of my latest book club selection, John of John, by award-winning novelist Douglas Stewart.
So Kenny is a former professional baseball player, and I heard the book made,
You feel seen. How so?
It did make me feel seen.
First, I just have to say that there's something profoundly healing in reading your words and affecting the chapters of my life through your words, through your lens.
So thank you for this book.
It was really splendid.
Thank you.
You know, I really enjoyed how the characters were portrayed through the relationships and dynamics through different perspectives.
And the one that really struck a chord with me
was the relationship between John and Cal,
the strained father-son relationship
with this dual secret.
I've known that I'm gay since I was seven years old,
and I came out when I was 21,
and I couldn't take it anymore.
It was just eating me from the inside.
My father was outed, not as being gay,
but as having a second family.
And so, you know, it really illicit,
illustrated like, wow, so if I just kept my secret for a very long time, it would have exploded into this big thing.
So I, you know, felt this catharsis in seeing the other perspective and really empathized with the pain that he must have been going through.
And, you know, throughout this all, it brought up the question of your intention and your hope for writing in this way.
Like, you know, for me, I grew up in a patriarchal society. Like, it turns out we all.
I'm trying to make sense of what it means to be a good man in a world that says that the kind of man that I am is never quite good enough.
And so, you know, was it your hope and your intention to connect with readers like me?
And like, I just want to know a little bit more about that.
Yeah, that's a thank you so much, all of you for your stories.
Yeah, I think often I feel that I come from a generation of gay men that's sort of been left behind by progress a little bit.
I feel like because I write about life before the new century, that we don't often like to talk about what oppression was like and what violence and homophobia was like.
And now that things are getting better, not for everybody, but they're improving all the time.
I feel like the, sometimes the desire is to move towards the joy and the inclusion very quickly.
And I want to just keep taking us back and saying, actually, the queer experience is universal.
And we often all felt very unloved and unseen and very hidden as children and as young people.
And I, you know, I think it's also certainly for me, I'm not sure about yourself, but certainly for me as a working class kid,
I feel like even literature and television doesn't talk about class as it intersects with
queerness in many ways.
It sort of tends to focus on a slightly more privileged life and the consequences change in
every sort of part of class.
And so a lot of my work is to say, well, look, it's very, very different if you don't
have the options to move and to be different places and you aren't exposed to as many things
as other people can be.
And so I hope just by sort of telling that story that people can relate to it through
their own experience, you know, I don't know quite how else to reach.
people but if I can just tell it with detail and with heart and with dignity then I feel
like people can see their own struggle in it yeah because you're not setting out to I
want to reach Kenny yeah you're setting out to tell a story that's inside your that's
right yeah that's right and your goal is to tell that story as fully and as
honestly as possible that's why you're talking to all of those people in the
community and doing all that research that's right sitting with them and if
that story is a fully realized and developed story
then people like Kenny will see themselves in the story.
That's right, that's right, yeah.
And also it's part of the joy of being a writer.
I mean, we set things in very specific places,
but human experience is universal,
and it's wonderful to meet you
and wonderful to meet people all around the world
who see themselves in my characters and the experience.
All right.
So you have a question.
It's beyond right.
Yes, it's Brianna.
Okay.
Great to read the book, and it was super captivating,
but the theme throughout it was lacking hope, I would say,
and there's a lot of sadness throughout the story.
So I was curious, what were you hoping the reader would feel,
especially by the end, without giving it away?
Can we talk about men a minute for a second?
You know, I was raised with men who did really hard jobs
and dangerous jobs that could have killed them.
And at any time, you know, shipbuilders and coal miners
and also people that went out into boats and fished very rough seas.
And I found often that one of the ways that they coped with that was by not being very expressive.
But I've spent a lot of my life as a writer thinking about the sadness that men must also carry
and how they have no outlet for it often.
Often they couldn't say that they were scared or they felt undervalued or this was dangerous work
because so many people were reliant on them for it.
And so the novel starts really in that place where John is doing this thing that his son does not want his inheritance,
but he has to keep doing it because he has to keep doing it.
because he is there.
And so I'm very interested in...
He wouldn't know what to do without it.
He wouldn't know what to do without it.
Yeah, and his life has amounted to something
that turns out none of the generations around him want.
But in that is a sadness,
a particular male sadness that sort of fascinates me.
And so I think I'm just trying to excavate that
and to give sort of the working class male
in this fiction a voice that says,
you know, that they also carry these very deep melancholy emotions in that way.
I think there is hope, but I think that hope comes slowly.
One of the things that was interesting about this book from my others is I had to submit to the rhythms of the island.
I had to, you know, things don't happen quickly or explosively.
It's a place where time is measured very differently.
And so I had to build it very slowly so that the profits of 50 years of keeping secrets are revealed towards the end of the novel.
And in that revealing is the hope that things will heal and get better, I hope.
So does that satisfy you?
Yes, I think the ending is going to surprise a lot of people.
Ending is going to surprise a lot of people, which we're not telling you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let's talk about the brothers, Innocent Sorley, who live in the same home,
and they literally aren't speaking to each other.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, you know, on the islands and...
They have brought no contact to a different level.
They have brought no contact.
For 16 years, they have lived in a small farmhouse,
and they have...
they are entirely ignoring each other,
to the point where if anyone has a conversation with them,
they have to ask one brother the question
and then turn and ask the same question.
How's your father?
How's your father?
How is your father?
And really, what sort of that stems from is
when you have children in a sort of rural life,
there is the agreement that one of the children
would have to take care of the parents,
take care of the house, would inherit this thing here.
But the other children get to do almost anything they want.
They can go into education, they can go see the world,
And Sorley has broken that agreement with his brother.
His brother, Innes, has dedicated his whole life to looking after his father.
And then Sorley went to university, saw the world,
and then returned anyway, which just breaks a tacit agreement between them.
But I wanted to create these men where,
because someone had really sort of not only stolen from one brother's life,
but then ruined the opportunities he might have had,
which might have involved love with another character, we won't spoil it.
How do you cope with that?
How do you live in a house with someone?
So much of the novel is about families being quite claustrophobically bound together through eating and worship and working and then living in this house.
And how well could I write these families where they think they know everything about each other, but actually they don't know each other almost at all?
In the end, writing a book, when you finish, I know as we're just saying with Kenny, you're not writing the story because you want people to, you're trying to reach a story.
certain person. But in the end, do you, as the creator of this beautiful story, do you have a feeling
about what you want it to do and say in the world? Yes. And in fact, I wrote the ending of the novel
many times. I kept pulling the novel back to the halfway point and a character would do something
different and then I would get the final thing. But I knew by the end of the book that I was trying to
show that it's often the arrogance of youth if we are the youngest generation in a family that we think
we're the only ones with secrets and hidden lives and, you know, that we're disappointed in how
things turned out. And we don't often afford enough empathy to our parents and our grandparents to
also wonder, are you living the life you wanted to live? Are you the person you wanted to be?
And so by the end of the novel, that was the question I wanted to answer. You know, it's not just
centered on us as the children, but it is about the generation that go before us. And can we really
heal, can we move on, can we have a happy life ourselves if our parents and grandparents are not
having that for themselves? Got it. After our last break, his book is so compelling. This audience has a
few more questions for Douglas. And listeners, I hope you're adding Douglas Stewart's John of John to
your reading list. Feel free to share the link to this episode with your own book club or fellow
book lovers in your life. Welcome back to the conclusion of my conversation with celebrated author
Douglas Stewart, his latest must-reat novel, John of John, is available now and is my
123 Oprah's Book Club selection.
Yes, sir.
I came of age and came out of the closet right about the same time as this story takes
place.
And what really struck me was not just the sense of carrying your secret, but this strong
sense of needing to worry about what everyone else thinks about you.
I was forced by my father to cut my hair around this time,
and I remember asking him almost the same thing,
Kyle asked Sean in the book,
why does it matter so much what other people think?
And my father was just incredulous at the question.
Like, of course, you should carry yourself through your life,
thinking about what everyone else is going to think about you.
And even after I came out, he had said to me,
I don't think I can live knowing that other people know,
that I have a gay son.
It was so much about, you know,
what people would think of him in relation to me.
And I just wondered if this was something you found
when you were on the islands,
I know there's a lot of, when you're in small towns,
everyone's gossiping about everyone else.
And so you're more worried about that.
But I was just curious about your experience with that.
Yeah, I think it comes back to the of the title again for me.
And masculinity in a slightly broader sense,
I think a lot about how fathers often want their sons to be made in their images.
And in terms of the novel, that's a very dangerous thing when the father hates his own image
and how sort of, you know, that's where the problem really stems from.
But fathers often want that for their sons because they understand how the patriarchy works
and how narrow masculinity often has to be expressed in the world.
And so while they're doing that to their sons, they're also upholding something
that they should probably dismantle in that way if that makes sense.
sense but oh i hadn't even thought of it that way before yeah i mean it's it's a sort of self-fulfilling
trap in a way you know when your father says you have to be tough and strong and short hair and brave
and all this and not allowing you to be whatever it is you might naturally so john is looking at the
image of himself and not liking and hating that image and therefore hating himself doesn't want it for
cow doesn't want it doesn't want and he sees it i mean i think fathers and sons even if they
try to ignore each other they see parents see what is happening inside their children on some level
And I think that's why he doesn't want to sort of talk about it.
Yeah, Bill said he knew Timothy was gay a year before he came out.
That's right, yeah.
But, you know, I'm sure it's your experience.
But one of the things about growing up gay is you become an, you're an absolute fiction to everybody around you until you can claim yourself.
You spend all of your formative years, not being yourself, but actually looking at how someone else looks at you always and then trying to hide the part of you that you know might bring you shame or judgment.
That's so interesting.
And so you are...
It's so interesting from a writer's point of view.
You're an absolute fiction.
You're an absolute fiction.
All young queer people of a certain generation and before are an absolute fiction
if they don't feel like they can be themselves, even with their parents.
And so much of the work that we do as adults is trying to figure out who we actually are
and who we should have been the whole time.
But it's not just about...
I mean, you're too young to have sexual desire at that age,
but it's even just about very simple things.
I like playing with a skipping rope or a doll or, you know, I like this pop star
or that.
And you're forever not really inside your own experience.
You're always looking at how other people are seeing you
and what they can catch you in.
And so that's...
And building on the fictional story
until you can actually come out and be your authentic self.
Or go to the mainland to art school and then go.
Yeah.
Right before your grandmother decides she wants to see you again.
Yeah, yeah.
The end of the novel made a lot of people weep.
Did it not make you teary?
Yeah.
The book was just a magnificent reading experience
that we thank you for.
And I have to say, for all of us who completed it,
it's like you dug into what love can do
for those living in a hostile and a judgmental world.
Did you not think that, Kenny?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think many people are going to be thanking you for that.
Thank you.
Thank you, Douglas Stewart.
Thank you.
John of John.
My 123rd Overs Book Club selection is now available
wherever you buy your books. Thank you to this insightful reading audience. Thank you for your
thoughtful observations about the book. We appreciate you. And we'll see you next time. Go well,
everybody. Go well. You can subscribe to the Oprah podcast on YouTube and follow us on Spotify,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen. I'll see you next week. Thanks, everybody.
