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Luster by Raven Leilani
Luster by Raven Leilani









Luster by Raven Leilani Luster by Raven Leilani

Eric and his ordinary suburban wife and home security system are alien to Edie's life in a mouse-infested Bushwick flat where she mourns her mother and laments her lack of creative fulfilment. Eric is the latter, and Luster fizzes in the process of that slow dissolve and the bitter tang it brings. "There are men who are an answer to a biological imperative, whom I chew and swallow, and there are men I hold in my mouth until they dissolve," Edie ponders at one point. The first seed of Luster is protagonist Edie meeting Eric, a married man with a "vaguely paternal old man frown" who she discovers on a dating app, leading to an awkward first date at a theme park. "There has been very real dissonance between the joy of this book or the relief I feel around its reception and the family stuff I’ve had going on in the background," says Leilani, who has been surprised by the reaction to the book having managed her expectations of success. When we speak it is the week of Thanksgiving in a year which has brought her extreme grief but also sublime joy. In March she lost her father to Covid-19 and several months later her terminally ill brother died.

Luster by Raven Leilani

It is a strange year for anyone to be flourishing, but for Leilani the disconnect between creative success and personal pain in 2020 has been profound. With the book due to be published in the UK in January, Leilani is now a New York Times–bestselling author and, as of this month, the recipient of The Center for Fiction first novel prize. Luster earned 30-year-old Leilani critical acclaim when it was published in America earlier this year, with Leilani's former New York University professor Zadie Smith offering a rapturous jacket quote which calls the book "brutal and brilliant".











Luster by Raven Leilani