Douglas Stuart‘s “John of John” has a secret hiding in plain sight. Oprah’s Book Club just found her.
The book club’s Instagram account put a spotlight on Ella, Cal’s maternal grandmother. The post credited reader Thando D for drawing attention to the character. Ella, the post explained, is “wiser than the community around her gives credit for.” Her intuition lets her see Cal and his son-in-law for who they really are. The catch? Neither man has figured himself out yet.
That’s the kind of character who tends to disappear in literary fiction. She’s not loud. She doesn’t demand the scene. She just knows. Thando D was paying close enough attention to notice.
Oprah’s Book Club’s acknowledgment matters. The club calls a character out by name and readers go back. They reread. They look for what they missed. That’s exactly what Ella seems to deserve.
Stuart is not a writer people overlook for long. His debut, “Shuggie Bain,” won the Booker Prize in 2020. It was a devastating portrait of a boy growing up in 1980s Glasgow. His mother’s addiction shaped every page. The book announced Stuart as one of the most important voices in contemporary fiction. His follow-up, “Young Mungo,” arrived in 2022. It centered two teenage boys in Glasgow and the violence that surrounded them.
Now “John of John” is under the Oprah’s Book Club microscope. The club has its eye on something specific: a grandmother named Ella. It’s asking readers to look closer.
That’s a specific kind of endorsement. Oprah’s Book Club has been launching books to the top of bestseller lists for decades. A shoutout this focused signals careful reading. The club isn’t skimming.
Thando D gets the credit here, and the book club made that clear. The post named the reader directly. Most literary commentary disappears into some collective hive. This was different.
Stuart has a gift for building characters who carry more weight than a first read reveals. If Ella fits that mold, she’s been waiting to be found.
Oprah’s Book Club is still reading “John of John.” More observations are likely coming. For now, Ella has her recognition. The question is what readers find when they go looking.
