From the Publisher
Cool, dark, and pretty as a clear night sky, The Lightness delivers a coming-of-age suspense tale that starts out familiar—ominous warnings, unreliable narration—before forging its own path.” — Entertainment Weekly
“Emily Temple’s debut The Lightness grants us a bold, smart, hilarious new voice. She tells a page-turning story that’s also a detective story—psychologically wise and totally wiseassed, all while being both cynical and spiritual. A classic must read!” — Mary Karr, New York Times bestselling author of Lit
“Emily Temple’s sentences are extraordinary: musical, bristling with animal intelligence, feline in their tensed sinuosity, their lack of the usual loyalties, their readiness to pounce. This remarkable novel is made up of equal parts desire and dread; it constantly surprised me, eerily outpacing my expectations. The Lightness is a glorious debut.” — Garth Greenwell, award-winning author of What Belongs to You
“Emily Temple has woven a darkly funny, luminously drawn mystery that hits bullseye after bullseye of language and emotion. The Lightness is a book I didn't know I needed and now can't stop thinking about: swift, surprising, and utterly captivating.” — Téa Obreht, New York Times bestselling author of Inland and The Tiger’s Wife
"Who can resist a novel about a Buddhist Boot Camp for Bad Girls? This debut is funny, whip-smart and transcendently wise about friendship, family, lust and love." — Jenny Offill, New York Times bestselling author of Weather and Dept. of Speculation
"A nimble and intelligent coming-of-age story, distinguished by a setting that offers extraordinary pleasures, and sumptuous prose. The Lightness is part thriller, part fairytale, in the tradition of writers like Emily St. John Mandel and Lydia Millet.” — Kelly Link, award-winning author of Get in Trouble
“Temple’s debut is suspenseful and stylish, opening with one mysterious death and an even more mysterious disappearance, taking on the nature of religious belief and female embodiment, doing it all with wit and intelligence.” — The Boston Globe, What to Read Now
“It’s a teen thriller in the vein of the ‘90s horror movie The Craft . . . But it’s also a beautiful meditation on meditation, with readings of sacred texts and light Buddhist history, populated with girls who refuse to act the way they’re expected to; who have too much passion, too many feelings and nowhere to put them; who are on the cusp of adulthood . . . The book—frequently hilarious, and thoughtful throughout—also transcends expectations at its end.” — The New York Times Book Review
“For fans of Sweetbitter and The Girls, Emily Temple’s debut glitters with poignant observations about desire and womanhood.” — Marie Claire, What We’re Reading
“Temple is an excellent writer . . . a rich meditation on the nature of desire and belonging.” — Los Angeles Times
“Very funny . . . She’s a gifted writer and storyteller with an unwavering command of her plot.” — Washington Post
|Los Angeles Times
Temple is an excellent writer . . . a rich meditation on the nature of desire and belonging.
The Boston Globe
Temple’s debut is suspenseful and stylish, opening with one mysterious death and an even more mysterious disappearance, taking on the nature of religious belief and female embodiment, doing it all with wit and intelligence.
Entertainment Weekly
Cool, dark, and pretty as a clear night sky, The Lightness delivers a coming-of-age suspense tale that starts out familiar—ominous warnings, unreliable narration—before forging its own path.
Marie Claire
For fans of Sweetbitter and The Girls, Emily Temple’s debut glitters with poignant observations about desire and womanhood.”
Téa Obreht
Emily Temple has woven a darkly funny, luminously drawn mystery that hits bullseye after bullseye of language and emotion. The Lightness is a book I didn't know I needed and now can't stop thinking about: swift, surprising, and utterly captivating.
Kelly Link
"A nimble and intelligent coming-of-age story, distinguished by a setting that offers extraordinary pleasures, and sumptuous prose. The Lightness is part thriller, part fairytale, in the tradition of writers like Emily St. John Mandel and Lydia Millet.
Mary Karr
Emily Temple’s debut The Lightness grants us a bold, smart, hilarious new voice. She tells a page-turning story that’s also a detective story—psychologically wise and totally wiseassed, all while being both cynical and spiritual. A classic must read!
The New York Times Book Review
It’s a teen thriller in the vein of the ‘90s horror movie The Craft . . . But it’s also a beautiful meditation on meditation, with readings of sacred texts and light Buddhist history, populated with girls who refuse to act the way they’re expected to; who have too much passion, too many feelings and nowhere to put them; who are on the cusp of adulthood . . . The book—frequently hilarious, and thoughtful throughout—also transcends expectations at its end.
Garth Greenwell
Emily Temple’s sentences are extraordinary: musical, bristling with animal intelligence, feline in their tensed sinuosity, their lack of the usual loyalties, their readiness to pounce. This remarkable novel is made up of equal parts desire and dread; it constantly surprised me, eerily outpacing my expectations. The Lightness is a glorious debut.
Jenny Offill
"Who can resist a novel about a Buddhist Boot Camp for Bad Girls? This debut is funny, whip-smart and transcendently wise about friendship, family, lust and love."
Los Angeles Times
Temple is an excellent writer . . . a rich meditation on the nature of desire and belonging.
Washington Post
Very funny . . . She’s a gifted writer and storyteller with an unwavering command of her plot.
Washington Post
Very funny . . . She’s a gifted writer and storyteller with an unwavering command of her plot.
null The New York Times Book Review
It’s a teen thriller in the vein of the ‘90s horror movie The Craft . . . But it’s also a beautiful meditation on meditation, with readings of sacred texts and light Buddhist history, populated with girls who refuse to act the way they’re expected to; who have too much passion, too many feelings and nowhere to put them; who are on the cusp of adulthood . . . The book—frequently hilarious, and thoughtful throughout—also transcends expectations at its end.
null Tricycle: The Buddhist Review
Emily Temple’s debut novel is 100 percent bingeable—I read carefully enough to soak it all in, but fast, because it’s so hard to put down. . . . The Lightness addresses power dynamics, female friendships, and bodies in a coming-of-age tale.
Chloe Benjamin
With dark, stylish prose and a group of teenage girls up to no good, The Lightness could be the love child of Donna Tartt and Tana French, but its savage, glittering magic is all Emily Temple’s own. Wrought by myth and mysticism, taut with desire and obsession, this debut looks unflinchingly at the nature of human being—and asks whether such constraints can be transcended. The Lightness is a book with fangs.”
null WSJ. Magazine
The breeziest book . . . in a good way . . . A smart but nervous girl who maintains a propulsive inner monologue that evokes Emma Cline’s The Girls and a group of eccentric and bizarre young people that channels Donna Tartt’s The Secret History.
The Best Books of 2020 Glamour
“If you’re a fan of Emma Cline, Ottessa Moshfegh, and Jenny Offill, give this one a shot.
The Philadelphia Inquirer
An elegant and entertaining debut novel. A mystery disguised as a coming-of-age story . . . This is one of those books that breaks your heart when it’s over.
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2020-03-29
Four teenage girls attempt to unlock the secrets of levitation in this unsettling debut from the senior editor of Literary Hub.
Olivia's father left to attend a Buddhist retreat at the Levitation Center but never returned home. When Olivia flees her abusive mother in order to find out what happened to him, she spends the summer attending the center's retreat for teen girls. "They were slick-finish girls, cat-eye girls, hot blood girls," Olivia recalls. "They were girls who reveled. They were girls who liked boys and back seats, who slid things that weren't theirs into their tight pockets." But the crackling energy of three girls in particular catches Olivia's eye: commanding Serena, stoic Janet, and provocative Laurel. Under the direction of Serena, the four young women convince Luke, the center's gardener and a universal object of teenage lust, to teach them the secrets of levitation. In preparation, the girls fast on nettle tea, play dangerous fainting games, and attempt to seduce Luke. The summer wears on, and Serena pushes them each to the brink. At last, Olivia must confront the possibility that Serena's quest for control over their bodies might put them all in danger—or is that what Olivia really wants? Temple's evocative exploration of teenage girlhood, shame, and longing illuminates the double-edged desire for power and belonging. Her sentences are complex and rich, although the ominous mood of the novel occasionally overpowers the emotional payoff of its reveals. "You might as well learn this now: even the tiniest bit of power turns me instantly immoral," Olivia laments early in the novel, though it's difficult to say how much power Olivia ever wields. Still, Temple's narrative strategies of deferral invite us into a complex, psychological study of a young woman haunted by her past—and her capacity to hunger for violence and self-destruction.
A dark, glittering fable about the terror of desire.