Description
A debut to look out for in 2026 for the Guardian, Stylist and Independent.
Set over one hot summer, a startlingly assured debut about the kinds of love that break us and make us whole.
One afternoon in 1976, teenagers Jean and Tom share an almost imperceptible look across the grounds of Compton Manor, a boarding school for boys with problems. Their gaze marks a secret intimacy, one defined as much by violence as by friendship and desire. As the boys’ connection deepens, so too does the risk that surrounds it. Jean – son of a single mother, Jewish, on a scholarship, forever an outsider – wonders whether the relationship might offer a way out of a life marked by alienation. But what if the only true path to freedom is to disappear altogether?
Spellbinding and evocative, Jean is a meditative narrative of loss and escape distilled into the heartrending story of an intense and dangerous adolescent love.
‘Jean utterly transported me. This coming-of-age novel has an unexpected and powerful undertow, revealing itself to be a story of unresolved loss and eventual erasure. Madeleine Dunnigan writes such beautifully tempered prose, and hers is an exquisite debut.’ Katie Kitamura
‘There’s something uncanny in Madeleine Dunnigan’s austerely beautiful prose, in how what begins as a character study takes on a cosmic scale. Jean is a darkly luminous, profound novel; there are passages that give the shock of the genuinely great. An extraordinary debut.’ Garth Greenwell
‘Jean is the rare novel I wish I’d had when I was younger, confused, pained, and a book I am so grateful I’ll have for the rest of my life. A showcase of tenderness and talent, Jean is a profound look at the universes within intimations.’ August Thompson
‘Madeleine Dunnigan is an important new voice in fiction. She tells this most unique coming-of-age story with strength and delicacy, emotion and precision. Jean is a gift.’ Jonathan Safran Foer
‘After reading Madeleine Dunnigan’s incandescent Jean, I truly feel I have lived a second life as a tempestuous outcast at a British boarding school, at once terribly lonely and utterly electrified by the allure of forbidden desire. Few debuts are as textured, immersive, and psychological. Fewer still so humanely capture the wildness and abjection of the adolescent heart.’ Maggie Millner
‘This book is so beautiful. I love how it lingers in the mix-up between desire and fear. It’s luscious and at the same time spiky, graceful and explosive, magical and brutal.’ Lillian Fishman
‘Striking and wholly transporting novel . . . The writing is gentle yet powerful, the story itself luminous and full of emotion.’ Diana Evans
‘Intimate, immersive and precise, I was captivated by Jean and its [. . .] sensuality and the slow movements towards heartbreak. I loved this book.’ Sophie Mackintosh
‘Reading it feels like witnessing the early work of one of Britain’s next great novelists.’ Amelia Abraham
‘The literary love child of Garth Greenwell and Ian McEwan is a young woman called Madeleine.’ Madeleine Feeny
‘Bruising, interesting, occasionally sublime.’ Kirkus

