76 Culture The Economist April 30th 2022
M
uchin“shuggiebain”echoed
DouglasStuart’sownlife.Asa child
theauthorlivedinSighthill,a poor
neighbourhoodnorthoftheRiverClyde
inGlasgow,asdoeshisyoungprotago
nist.AlsolikeShuggie,MrStuartwas
bulliedandfeltatoddsina hypermas
culineenvironment;hepreferredthe
companyofhismother,fictionalisedas
Agnes,whodiedfromalcoholismwhen
MrStuartwasinhisteens.Overthe
courseofa decadehetransmogrified
theseexperiencesintoa haunting,po
werfuldebutnovel.ItwontheBooker
prizein 2020 andhassoldmorethan
1.5mcopiesinEnglishworldwide.
“YoungMungo”,MrStuart’snew
work,isa closesiblingto“ShuggieBain”.
It,too,issetinpovertystrickenGlasgow
andfollowsthecomingofageofitsgay
protagonist.Thereareabsentfathersand
mothersinthralltothebottle;the
youngstersdon’tknowwhattheywant
outoflifefromanalreadylimitedsetof
options.MrStuartagaindisplayshis
talentforcharacter,grotesqueonesin
particular,andhumorousdialogue.
Butthissecondworkisevenbleaker
thanthefirst.UnlikeAgnes,whopersis
tentlyelicitedthereader’ssympathy
despiteherfailings,Mungo’smotherhas
noredeemingqualities.Whensteepedin
drink,MoMawbecomes“Tattiebogle”,a
horridcreaturewhose“lowerjawwould
hanglooseandhertonguewouldrollin
hermouthina dirty,lasciviousway,like
shewantedverybadlytolicksomething”.
Sheabscondstolivewitha newloverand
doesn’tthinkofherchildrenmuchatall,
leavingJodie,Mungo’sbrightoldersister,
tolookafterhim.
“YoungMungo”ismorebrutalthan
itspredecessoraswell.Neverfarawayin
“ShuggieBain”,violenceisomnipresent
inthisbook.Mungo’sbrother,Hamish,is
theleaderofa bloodthirstyProtestant
gang;itsmemberswieldhomemade
weaponswhenmutilatingtheirCatholic
rivals.MrStuart’sdescriptionsofinjuries
aregrimlyvivid:a gashis“raisedand
puckeredwhiteattheedges,likethetorn
fatona rasherofbacon”.
Mungoisperceivedbyallastoonaive,
toosensitiveandtoouninterestedin
girls.Hamishthinksinductinghiminto
thegangwouldsethimright.MoMaw
dispatchesMungowithtwostrangerson
a fishingtripto“makea man”outofhim.
Bothschemeshavedisastrousresults.
ThelightinallthisdarknessisMun
go’srelationshipwithJames,a Catholic
boywhofindsa reprievefromtheestate
bytendingtopigeons.Thetwofallin
love,despitetheobviousperil,andplot
theirescape.Attimesthebarbarityde
scribedsounflinchinglyin“YoungMun
go”canbehardtostomach.ButMrStu
art’sdeft,lyricalprose,andtheflickerof
hopethatremainsforMungo,keepthe
readerturningthepage.
Scottishfiction
Growing pains
YoungMungo.ByDouglasStuart.Grove
Press; 400 pages;$27.Picador;£16.99
Thedeargreenplace
IndustrialistsandtheNaziregime
Hitler’s enablers
A
t theappealshearinginApril 1949 of
Günther Quandt, one of Nazi Ger
many’s top industrialists, Julius Herf, the
prosecutor, read from “The Protestant Eth
ic and the Spirit of Capitalism” in his clos
ing argument. He felt the passage in
Max Weber’s magnum opus elucidated
Quandt’s singleminded personality:
It’s the intoxication of the pursuit of power,
the intoxication of building a huge corpora
tion, the obsession with selfaffirmation
that is at the root of all this, and it’s the belief
in the value of one’s own work, not only be
cause work is something moral, but because
building the corporation is the ultimate
good, and because anything that resists
building it out is bad.
He did not manage to persuade the
Munich court of Quandt’s guilt, nor the Ba
varian court of cassation where he again
appealed the verdict. Judges argued there
was no “clear proof” that Quandt had pro
cured “excessive advantages” for himself
under the Nazis. As David de Jong de
scribes in “Nazi Billionaires”, other Ger
man magnates, including RudolfAugust
Oetker and August von Finck, got “little
more than a slap on the wrist”.
After Adolf Hitler’s rise to power, Ger
man companies benefited from lucrative
contracts related to rearmament. They
took over Jewishowned businesses. Fac
ing a shortage of workers during the war,
German firms staffed their factories with
concentrationcamp inmates and forced
labourers from occupied territories in Eu
rope. Many of these 13.5m people died from
starvation, abuse or poor living and work
ing conditions.
Yet businessmen were often deemed by
regional denazification courts to be mere
followers of the regime rather than active
supporters. Executives went back to work
in the newly founded federal republic to
become even richer. Friedrich Flick (pic
tured on next page) was an exception: Mr
de Jong describes him as “one of the Third
Reich’s largest arms producers, Aryanisers,
and exploiters of forced and slave labour
through his steel, coal and machinery con
glomerate”. In December 1947, during the
Nuremberg trials, Flick was convicted of
war crimes and crimes against humanity
and sentenced to seven years in prison.
The shameful role of Germany’s busi
ness dynasties during the Nazi regime has
been known for decades, but Mr de Jong’s
investigative work adds detail. “Initially,
most business tycoons viewed Hitler and
his Nazis as loud, violent, boorish, brutish
uniformed curiosities from the uneducat
ed and impoverished hinterlands,” he
writes. That changed after the global stock
market crash in 1929, which took a devas
tating toll on the German economy. In
September 1930 the Nazi party became the
secondlargest in the Reichstag. For Hitler,
economic malaise opened the door to Ger
many’s richest businessmen: they hoped a
Faustian pact with the upstart from Austria
would help to shield their business em
pires from a rebellion on the left.
Von Finck, a financier who joined the
Nazi Billionaires: The Dark History of
Germany’s Wealthiest Dynasties.
By David de Jong. Mariner Books; 400 pages;
$28.99. William Collins; £25