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Learn moreBookseller recommendation
“Twenty-something Edie is struggling to find her place in the world. She's flailing, moving between jobs and out of her apartment, into her lover's home. But, she is the mistress, faced with the reality that the open relationship she entered isn't everything she thought - but it's the best she can find. As Edie's loyalties to her lover subside she really begins to find a home with his wife and daughter. Leilani examines intricate relationships, identity as an artist, and coming into your own in the complex, thrilling web that is Luster.”
— Christy • Avid Bookshop
Bookseller recommendation
“Luster centers on Edie, a young black woman working in New York publishing and barely making rent each month, who finds herself navigating a suburban white coupleās open marriage. This novel is filled with unexpected turns taken at breakneck speeds. It seamlessly examines the plight of millennials living under capitalism along with the complications of intimacy and race, all while finding both the humor and profound sadness in those things. This is a multifaceted and brilliant book, as well as an extraordinary debut from Raven Leilani.”
— Billy Butler • Bookshop Santa Cruz
Bookseller recommendation
“An incredibly unique story, Luster inserts the reader into the head of the novel's protagonist, a young Black woman having an affair with an older white man in an open marriage. Things get complicated when she sneaks into her lover's house and is caught by the wife who then invites her to stay for their anniversary party. Luster is a brilliant mash-up (kind of) of Such a Fun Age and The Roxy Letters, but with added layers. Raven Leilani's writing is going to stick with me for a long time!”
— Mary • Skylark Bookshop
Bookseller recommendation
“Luster is a hand grenade disguised as a coming of age novel. It's everything you want in a bildungsroman -- it's intimate, funny, and daring -- but in Raven Leilani's skilled hands it is also volatile and complex, a profound meditation on the intersection of race and loneliness, a thorny examination of sexuality and trauma, of power and privilege, and the subtle interplay between all of the above. It's also so absorbing and compelling that it's hard not to read it in one sitting. With 4 months to go, this is my favorite book published in 2020 so far.”
— Rachel • The Book Table
Bookseller recommendation
“Edie's story reveals the complicated truths of dating in your 20s, while also discussing being Black, class, and depression. This short book gives all of the feels.”
— Tara • Old Firehouse Books
Bookseller recommendation
“Although Edie makes questionable choices and seems to have difficulty understanding her sexuality, she unapologetically takes ownership of her body (to the extent she can) and attempts to find pleasure in using her body to make others uncomfortable. Edie is messy, intelligent, complicated, beautiful, disruptive, emotional, and real. Leilani does not put Edie into any of the stereotypical neatly packaged boxes that perpetuate racism and bore readers. At moments that could arguably be stereotypical, Leilaniās choice to utilize a stream-of-consciousness narration style allows for a deeper exploration of these ideas through Edieās perspective. Leilani portrays each grotesque and beautiful moment that makes up this phase of Edieās life with authenticity and without judgment. I was also pleasantly surprised to see the focus not only on the relationship between Edie and Eric, but also between Edie and Rebecca, and between Edie and Akila. However, at its heart, this book is about Edieās relationship with herself.”
— Endya • Beausoleil Books
"There is a universal appeal to [Narrator Ariel] Blake's performance as Edie, a protagonist who may be her own worst antagonist. Blake's delivery has an immensely human, relatable quality that makes the listener want the best for Edie as she struggles to make her way in the world." -- AudioFile Magazine, Earphones Award winner
AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK OF 2020
NATIONAL INDIE BESTSELLER
LOS ANGELES TIMES BESTSELLER
WASHINGTON POST BESTSELLER
No one wants what no one wants.
And how do we even know what we want? How do we know weāre ready to take it?
Edie is stumbling her way through her twentiesāsharing a subpar apartment in Bushwick, clocking in and out of her admin job, making a series of inappropriate sexual choices. She is also haltingly, fitfully giving heat and air to the art that simmers inside her. And then she meets Eric, a digital archivist with a family in New Jersey, including an autopsist wife who has agreed to an open marriageāwith rules.
As if navigating the constantly shifting landscapes of contemporary sexual manners and racial politics werenāt hard enough, Edie finds herself unemployed and invited into Ericās homeāthough not by Eric. She becomes a hesitant ally to his wife and a de facto role model to his adopted daughter. Edie may be the only Black woman young Akila knows.
Irresistibly unruly and strikingly beautiful, razor-sharp and slyly comic, sexually charged and utterly absorbing, Raven Leilaniās Luster is a portrait of a young woman trying to make sense of her lifeāher hunger, her angerāin a tumultuous era. It is also a haunting, aching description of how hard it is to believe in your own talent, and the unexpected influences that bring us into ourselves along the way.
A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux
"Ariel Blake narrates, expertly inhabiting Edieās knowing and analytical tone, and revelling in the writerās winding sentences and caustic one-liners." --The Guardian
āExacting, hilarious, and deadly . . . A writer of exhilarating freedom and daring.ā āZadie Smith, Harperās Bazaar
"So delicious that it feels illicit . . . Raven Leilaniās first novel reads like summer: sentences like ice that crackle or melt into a languorous drip; plot suddenly, wildly flying forward like a bike down a hill." āJazmine Hughes, The New York Times Book Review
āAn irreverent intergenerational tale of race and class thatās blisteringly smart and fan-yourself sexy.ā āMichelle Hart, O: The Oprah Magazine
Raven Leilaniās work has been published in Granta, The Yale Review, McSweeneyās Quarterly Concern, Conjunctions, The Cut, and New England Review, among other publications. Leilani received her MFA from NYU and was an Axinn Foundation Writer-in-Residence. Luster is her first novel.
Ariel Blake is a Black and Guyanese (American) theater artist, teacher, abolitionist & birth keeper based in Flatbush, Brooklyn. Her voice can also be heard narrating An Abolitionistās Handbook by Patrisse Cullors and Raven Leilaniās Luster, among other titles.
Reviews
Longlisted for the 2020 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize
An Indie Bestseller
Best Reviewed Novel of the Week at Book Marks
A Book Club Pick at Goop, Belletrist, Marie Claire, Esquire, Book of the Month Club (add-on), Bull Moose Bookstore, and Books on the Subway
**One of the Most Anticipated Books of Summer 2020**
Vogue, Elle, Time, The New York Times, Good Morning America online, The Washington Post, Esquire, The Chicago Tribune, Harperās Bazaar, Shondaland, Goop, Vulture, The Huffington Post, Parade, USA Today, COLORLINES, Literary Hub, Pittsburgh City Paper, Bust, Buzzfeed, Ms. Magazine, Electric Literature, Refinery29, PopSugar, The Millions, The Rumpus, Observer, Book Riot, Thrillist, Domino, PureWow, PopSugar, New York Amsterdam News, Debutiful, Write or Die Tribe, Book Bub, Odyssey, Suitcase, We Are Bookish, Apartment Therapy, Paperback Paris, Bookshop.org, Green Apple Books
"So delicious that it feels illicit . . . Raven Leilaniās first novel reads like summer: sentences like ice that crackle or melt into a languorous drip; plot suddenly, wildly flying forward like a bike down a hill."
āJazmine Hughes, The New York Times Book Review
ā[Raven Leilani] is a sharp phrasemaker . . . [and] Luster, a highly pleasurable interrogation of pleasure . . . There is more than a touch of Ralph Ellison here, the hypervisible invisible woman who is cast by the world in categorical terms while trying to be seen for herself.ā
āAlexandra Schwartz, The New Yorker
"Darkly funny with wicked insight . . . This keenly observed, dynamic debut is so cutting, it almost stings."
āLauren Puckett, Elle
āEdie is an African American woman, but not every African American woman is Edie. What's best about Luster is precisely her messy, unabashed individuality. As she explores the world around her, Edie addresses us in a funny, shrewd narrative voice that precisely describes the wide-ranging contours of her life, be it losing her virginity, watching Rebecca cut up cadavers, going to Comic-Con or showing how police respond to two young Black women walking in a suburban neighborhood.ā
āJohn Powers, NPR
āWildly beguiling . . . [Raven Leilani is] a phenomenal writer, her dense, dazzling paragraphs shot through with self-effacing wit and psychological insight.ā
āLeah Greenblatt, Entertainment Weekly
āThis debut novel from powerhouse writer Raven Leilani . . . deftly subverts the white gaze while also crafting an unforgettable protagonist. But the real fire here is Leilaniās writing. Her sentences are gorgeous, and both the prose and the content will make you sweat.ā
āSarah Neilson, Shondaland
āBlistering . . . thrums with observational humor . . . Luster is not a novel concerned with romantic drama. Itās all about attentionāwhy we crave it and what forms it takes. Leilani carefully pulls the strings of Edie, Rebecca, Eric and Akila, revealing how lonely they all are . . . Unsettling and surreal.ā
āAnnabel Gutterman, Time
āStrange, hilarious, important.ā
āBethanne Patrick, The Washington Post
āAn emotional rollercoaster that will have you on the verge of tears or in stitches with laughter.ā
āSian Babish, The Chicago Tribune
"There is nothing on offer like Lusterāthe story of a Black woman who is neither heroic nor unduly tragic . . . She is destructive but tender, ravenous for experience but deeply vulnerableāand often wickedly funny.ā
āParul Sehgal, The New York Times
āOn every page a shudder of recognition, then a lol, then an electroshock. Itās gutting and hilarious and lush. Every detail builds so beautifully, I donāt want to spoil anything, but if you want to forget yourself in a passage . . . 100 times over, this is your next read.ā
āTavi Gevinson on Instagram
"This novel is ridiculously good: gorgeous, dark, and funny, with sentences that'll wreck you. I will follow this author anywhere she wants to take me."
āCarmen Maria Machado, author of In the Dream House
āNarrated with fresh and wry jadedness, Edieās every disappointment [is] rendered with a comic twist . . . Edieās life is a mess, her past is filled with sorrow, sheās wasting her precious youth, and yet, reading about it all is a whole lot of fun.ā
āChloe Schama, Vogue
āExacting, hilarious, and deadly . . . A writer of exhilarating freedom and daring.ā
āZadie Smith, Harperās Bazaar
āA darkly funny, hilariously moving debut from a stunning new voice. Luster follows the unforgettable Edie, a hapless young woman suffocating under her own loneliness, whose caustic observations made me laugh out loud and gasp in recognition. Raven Leilani crafts a beautiful, bighearted story about intimacy and art that will astound and wound you. I couldnāt put this one down.ā
āBrit Bennett, author of The Vanishing Half
"There are pages in this book so good they burn your fingers."
āGarth Greenwell on Twitter
āPromises to be an August hit . . . As Edie searches for her identity as an artist and a Black woman, she spins a tale of intrigue and coming-of-age, all with electric storytelling.ā
āZibby Owens, Good Morning America online
āThe most thrilling thing Iāve read in months.ā
āStephanie Danler on Instagram
āCompulsively readable.ā
āEmma Specter, Vogue
āLike all great books, Luster eludes easy categorization. Itās a slippery novel about many thingsābeing young, being Black, being a woman, being depressed, feeling lonely, latent trauma, sex . . . What is so immediately striking about Lusterāand what sets it apart from the glut of millennial fictionāis the quality of the writing itself.ā
āTomi Obaro, Buzzfeed News
āVibrant, spiky . . . Leilani is a master . . . a major new talent . . . Luster isnāt just a sardonic book, but a powerful one about emotional transformation.ā
āMark Athitakis, USA Today
āMercilessly funny and sharp, Raven Leilaniās Luster is unexpected and utterly fascinating.ā
āMegan DiTrolio, Marie Claire
āAn unstable ballet of race, sex, and power. Leilaniās characters act in ways that often defy explanation, and that is part of what makes them so alive, and so mesmerizing: Whose behavior, in real life, can be reduced to simple cause and effect? Sharp, strange, propellentāand a whole lot of fun.ā
āKirkus, starred review
āLuster is the best debut novel of the year. It glitters, it pulses, it lives! Simultaneously full of pain and laughter.ā
āEmma Straub on Twitter
āA rocket-paced, sensual fever dream of sex, trauma, relationships and conflicting perceptions . . . Luster is intoxicating and surprising, never letting readers settle into recognizable patterns. Leilani has crafted an unforgettable novel about a young woman making her own way.ā
āJulia Kastner, Shelf Awareness
āWhat stands out here is Leilaniās prose, which is breathless, frantic, and reads like a Twitter wit grew legs and an IRL identity.ā
āHillary Kelly, Vulture
āSexy, funny, and wholly self-aware, Luster couldnāt come at a better time.ā
āThrillist
āRaven Leilani's sentences pulse and writhe and shimmer and gut-punch. Above all they tell the truth, even when it hurts.ā
āAngela Flournoy, author of The Turner House
āThe narrative voice of this startling novel is layered, complex, pitch-black comic, and deadly earnest, even ardent in its will to sift through the chaos and idiocy of our madhouse culture and find some glimpse of human reality. Raven Leilani is intellectually supple and steely at the same time; she thinks and perceives blessedly outside any kind of norm. She has made a truly lustrous piece of art.ā
āMary Gaitskill, author of This Is Pleasure
āAn utterly strange and beautiful book, at once grab-your-gut visceral and the work of a razor-sharp intellect. The sentences are simply virtuosic.ā
āC. Pam Zhang, author of How Much of These Hills Is Gold
āTimeless . . . Luster is lean and focused, yet dense with reference and detail, the lush prose heightening its tangible specificity. Leilani also makes smart use of the well-placed long sentence, the catharsis that can arrive when something comes to an end.ā
āLaura Adamczyk, A.V. Club
āLeilaniās radiant debut belongs to its brilliant, fully formed narrator. Old soul Edie has an otherworldly way of seeing the world and reflecting it back to readers, peppering experiences of past and current despair with acceptance and humor but never sacrificing depth, of which her story has miles. A must for seekers of strongly narrated, original fiction.ā
āBooklist, starred review
āSexy, funny and haunting, Luster is a simmering debut.ā
āKarla Strand, Ms. Magazine
āHilarious, honest, bursting with desire and sharp insight, Luster is absolutely captivating. I didnāt so much read it, as gulp it down. Thereās so much to learn here, so much to admire. Leilani is an irreverent, impeccable stylistāa voice we need right now.ā
āJustin Torres, author of We the Animals
āThe threat of a sharp edge is on every page . . . Interior monologues are written like the tenebrist masterpieces Edie loves . . . Sex is the answer to many of the bookās questions, yet the fact of fucking is nowhere near as thrilling as what Leilani understands: the endless ways the desires of another can be made to feel like our own.ā
āHaley Mlotek, Frieze
āWonderful.ā
āMegan Giddings, The PEN America Podcast
āA beguiling fever dream of a novel, shot through with wistfulness, humor, and a kind of breathless, furious verve. Youāll find it impossible to put down.ā
āLing Ma, author of Severance
āIn Luster, Raven Leilani has created a character unlike any other in recent fiction. A slacker black queen, a depressive painter, a damn funny woman. The narrator of this novel tells us of her history and her present life in hypnotic language that is a pleasure to read. Leilani is such a talented writer, I rushed to the end of every outrageous sentence to figure out how she would pull it off.ā
āKaitlyn Greenidge, author of We Love You, Charlie Freeman
āLuster hooked us from the opening sex scene . . . Charged and hypnotic, Luster is poised to become one of the books that defines what itās like to be young in this moment.ā
āgoop.com
āElectric, heralding a singular new literary voice . . . Provocative and surprising. Edie is both emblematic of a generation of detached, fiercely intelligent yet hopelessly drifting young women, who yearn for something more.ā
āKristen Iversen, Refinery29
āRaven Leilani is a writer of unusual daring, with a voice that is unique and fully formed. There is humor, intelligence, emotion, and power in her work. I cannot think of a writer better suited to capture our moment.ā
āKatie Kitamura, author of A Separation
āThe perfect antidote to the taut ball of nerves weāve all been carrying around since March . . . This story combines social commentary, racial politics and searing humor. E-readers, you might want to forgo the Kindle for the actual book. Youāll want something to grip.ā
āToby Lowenfels, Whatās Up Moms
"A coming-of-age story thatās sure to keep you turning pages."
āStephanie Long, Refinery29
āA smart and bold exploration of self-worth and self-appreciation . . . both sexy and sad, angry but funny, with impressive literary prose that is blunt and mischievous, luring you with little intention to let go . . . Leilani has given us a novel of our times.ā
āCarissa Chesanek, PANK
"A stunning debut from a powerful new voice . . . Narrative drive oozes out of every sentence. This novel is a pleasure to read on all levels.ā
āCatie Disabato, Cinnamon Magazine
āThe narrator of Luster . . . is the fierce, unruly antidote to what Jess Bergman called the āremote avatars of contemporary malaiseāāshe is not cool, nor detached, nor noncommittal, but absolutely bursting with thoughts and feelings and desires, some of which often spill over and make a mess, or a scene, or a bonfire. Edie talks shit but also takes itāsheās hilariously caustic about the world around her, but her criticism never feels empty. I loved every minute.ā
āEmily Temple, Lit Hub
āLeilaniās writing is cerebral and raw, and this debut novel will establish her as a powerful new voice . . . [She] has proven herself to be a keen social observerāespecially about the truths that some people donāt want to see.ā
āJessica Wakeman, BookPage
āSometimes thereās a book that everyone in the publishing world is talking about. Luster is that book.ā
āAdam Vitcavage, Electric Literature
āDebuts as accomplished as Luster make you exclaim āwhat a findā at the end of the novel . . . It is disruptive, darkly funny, and searingāfive stars! Read it if you like to navigate social landscapes, sexual politics and interracial relationships clothed as an entertaining, and riveting book.ā
āResh Susan, The Book Satchel
āLeilani has an uncanny, genius way with sentences. Her more humorous lines unravel and fork like snake tongues into many directions at once; but in moments of absolution, they strike like a burning torch.ā
āAlex Zafiris, Observer
āTackling questions of race, age, and power, Luster is a must-read new novel that perfectly captures our strange age.ā
āK.W. Colyard, Bustle
āFunny, raw and brutally honest, Raven Leilani brilliantly captures the trials of your twenties.ā
āKailey Brennan, Write or Die Tribe
āYou should absolutely run out (or log on quickly) to buy Raven Leilaniās Luster . . . Brilliant, captivating.ā
āEmily Temple, BOMB
āOpen relationships, racial dynamics and class form the backbone of Leilani's darkly humorous yet insightful debut.ā
āRae Boocock, Suitcase
"Nothing if not an ambitious work . . . Refreshingly honest about Edieās ambivalence, desperation, and longing . . . Luster is a novel about what it means to be a black-female flaneur . . . The real architecture of this novel rests on Edieāthe young black vixen, usually relegated to the observed and the consumed, becoming the observer and hungrily eating up the worlds around her."
āKaitlyn Greenidge, Virginia Quarterly Review
āNew Yorkers, I dare you to not find this novel relatable af.ā
āSara Levine, Betches
āLeilani is a voice America desperately needs and Luster delivers.ā
āPaperback Paris
āIt reads like a lyrical bildungsroman, one that feels almost painfully resonant to the contemporary young adult experience, particularly one of a young Black woman . . . Staggeringly brilliant . . . Luster feels likeāand has rightfully been hailed asāthe entrance of a singular, breakthrough literary voice . . . Leilaniās writing is haunted and poetic, brimming with incisive jabs at the indignities and disorientations of young Black womanhood, but one of the great and subtle feats of the novel is its ability to observe these realities as pedestrian, grounded within the interior of Edieās life. Moments never feel, in themselves, like stand-ins for a treatise of the āismsā of America. Instead, encounters unfold strangely in Edieās lonesome, mournful world.ā
āBrandon Yu, Datebook
āOne of the year's most anticipated titles for good reason: this story of race, privilege, art, and sexuality is brilliant.ā
āSabienna Bowman, PopSugar
āThis book made me gasp. The prose! To arrange 10 words Iāve known for most of my life and make me see something new in them is startling . . . I recommend this novel to anyone who is looking for a disruptive take on a summer book. It brings the heat and then some.ā
āSacha Vega, The Cha Cha Reader
ā[Luster is] so good . . . Itās refreshing, itās honest, itās very funny. Her sentences rarely end the way I think theyāre going to.ā
āKatie Yee, Lit Hubās āThe Week in Books LIVEā