Blue Light Hours

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4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$17.00  $15.81
Publisher
Grove Press, Black Cat
Publish Date
Pages
192
Dimensions
5.4 X 8.2 X 0.6 inches | 0.55 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780802163776

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About the Author
Bruna Dantas Lobato is a writer and translator. Her fiction has appeared in The New Yorker, Guernica, A Public Space, and The Common. She was awarded the 2023 National Book Award in Translated Literature for The Words That Remain by Stênio Gardel. Dantas Lobato was born and raised in Natal, Brazil, and teaches at Grinnell College. Blue Light Hours is her debut novel.
Reviews

Praise for Blue Light Hours:

Named One of Electric Literature's "75 Books by Women of Color to Read in 2024"

"By many measures, Bruna Dantas Lobato is quite the literary star. At 33, the Brazilian American has published a cascade of translations, both fiction and nonfiction, from Portuguese to English, and last year won the National Book Award for translated literature. But one story, she said, was missing from her bibliography: her own. With her debut novel, Blue Light Hours, centered on a Brazilian student who sees her close relationship with her mother reduced to a computer screen when she moves to New England for college, she is finally closing that gap."--Celia McGee, New York Times (profile)

"This is a slim work with a narrow focus that belies the depth of its own emotion, the profundity of Dantas Lobato's observations . . . There's a quiet lyricism to Dantas Lobato's prose, an elegance both to her sentences and to the shape of the book as a whole. It's a work you could read in an afternoon or linger over for an entire winter, finding something new to savor on each page . . . In her first novel, she shows that her talent as a writer is at least as tremendous as her talent as a translator."--Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"There is a lot to praise in Dantas Lobato's book but I have to compliment one thing: the vibes. This book felt right. It is quiet and haunting as it invites readers to meet a Brazilian woman who is spending her first year in America away from the comforts and love of home. She encapsulates loneliness and longing while offering a future filled with love on the horizon."--Adam Vitcavage, Debutiful

"Through the emanating blue-glow of their computer screens, a mother and daughter, four-thousand miles apart, find solace and loneliness in their nightly Skype chats in this heartstring-pulling debut. Who's it for: Someone who needs to be reminded to CALL YOUR MOTHER!"--The Millions

"Both melancholic and mesmerizing . . . The prose itself embodies loneliness: crisp, declarative sentences that have the flow and rhythm of poetry. Blue Light Hours is an intimate meditation on home and homesickness, belonging and wanting to belong, on what it means to leave and be left, and the many tiny ways of attempting to bridge an impossible distance."--BookPage

"A subtle, contemplative story of a mother and daughter divided by 4,000 miles . . . With love, care, quiet humor, and pervasive yearning, this thoughtful story explores the dilemmas of coming of age and leaving home, the tension between separation and connection . . . Dantas Lobato's careful, lovely prose will linger long after these pages end."--Shelf Awareness

"This stunning literary debut packs a punch . . . Dantas Lobato's ingenuity resides in crafting a story that at first seems quiet and slow through her meticulous use of white space, uninterested in adhering to conventional plot expectations, but that under the surface commits instead to an accumulation of movement and feeling that feels far truer to this fragmented mother-and-daughter relationship than any grandiose narrative could . . . This is the immigrant novel at its tenderest."--Flávia Stefani, Electric Literature

"Dantas Lobato debuts with a delicate story of a student's first year at college and the pain of separation between her and her mother . . . Throughout, Dantas Lobato crafts atmospheric details of the pastoral setting and the ersatz intimacy of video calls. This shines."--Publishers Weekly

"Quietly melancholic and perfect for fall reading."--Goodreads Editors' Pick (October)

"An astonishingly beautiful novel, full of longing and love. I've never read a mother-daughter story this tenderhearted. It's a revelation."--Jenny Offill, New York Times bestselling author of Weather

"Blue Light Hours is a spellbinding meditation on distance and intimacy, holding close and letting go. In attentive linguistic brush strokes, Bruna Dantas Lobato offers a tender and dynamic portrait of the mutual care between a mother and a daughter as they navigate life apart. Resplendent."--Tess Gunty, author of The Rabbit Hutch, winner of the National Book Award

"Reading Blue Light Hours, I found myself first pensive, then intrigued, then wildly moved and completely captured. You won't regret any time spent with Bruna Dantas Lobato's delicate and wise constructed universe of connection, of loss, of the immigrant's privations, of radiant love."--Sarah Thankam Mathews, author of All This Could Be Different, finalist for the National Book Award

"Out of a maelstrom of daunting themes--including migration, illness, and single parenthood--sails this quiet and utterly beautiful novel of daughterly devotion. At once an ode to family and a paean to independence, Blue Light Hours renders the private textures of digital intimacy with more subtlety and tenderness than any other book I can think of."--Maggie Millner, author of Couplets

"Blue Light Hours is a melancholy, strange, and love-suffused book, exploring a relationship through a medium that connected families around the world long before the Zoom era. Through Skype, a mother and daughter a continent apart create a dreamlike, almost womblike space, wrestling an uncanny closeness from a distance of thousands of miles. A quietly beautiful coming-of-age story that never loses sight of the people who come along--or don't--for the transformation wrought by time and distance."--Lydia Kiesling, author of Mobility

"At times, reading this utterly beautiful book, I thought I could not bear the tenderness of it. Bruna Dantas Lobato has written an aching portrait of the mother and child bond, with all its love and sadness, with such wisdom and capacious humanity. The yearning in these pages will haunt me."--Ayşegül Savaş, author of White on White

"Bruna Dantas Lobato is one of those examples with which we are gratifyingly reassured that the future of literature is bright indeed."--Rick Moody