Luster
2020 • 203 pages

Ratings94

Average rating3.6

15

LUSTER is a stunning debut novel, and I can't stop thinking about it. I freaking loved it.

Content warnings: casual sex, death of a parent, death by suicide, physical violence involving a partner, prior abortion, miscarriage

The synopsis doesn't do this book justice. Sure, there's casual sex, unconventional arrangements, kink...but that all fades into the background when you realize that it's a mechanism to enable Edie's self-exploration, self-destruction, and self-creation.

This book might not be for everyone. It's a discomfiting read, one that explores our base human impulses. Edie's observations on life, race, and class are sometimes very frank, but other times very subtle. Many reviews have labeled this book millennial and singular, but I felt this book was universal and human in the ways that make us nervous.

At 240ish pages this book touches on way more than I can possibly cover with any brevity so I'm focusing on one element that really stood out to me: the art.

Edie is an artist, so of course her paintings and art are a factor in this book. But I'm thinking more about art as character pairings, geometry and abstraction in relationships, and lighting. There are a lot of binaries: push and pull, light and dark, open and close. (This is especially the case with Edie and Eric, and Edie and Rebecca.) Many of the relationships are shapes that convulse, like the triangle between Edie, Rebecca, and Eric, as the book goes on and certain relationships morph in ways that are unexpected. Art can also be unsettling and grotesque, and you get elements of that here.

Nowhere in the book is “luster” mentioned other than the title. I know what luster is but I couldn't really describe it, so I looked it up in the dictionary. Luster is a sheen, a glimmer, sometimes reflective; it can also be a ceramic coating. And I think that captures this book and Edie's multidimensionality so well. Your feelings ripple and change depending on how you look at Edie or this period in her life. And to some extent, luster is something external, like a coat Edie wears and loses, then finds again.

Of course race and the nature of Edie's relationship to and with both Eric and Rebecca as a Black woman with a white couple is a huge aspect of why this book has been buzzy. I'd point you to Own Voices reviews on this (some are tagged below!).

I will say this – to the white reviewers who can't relate or who don't like how “messy” Edie is, take into consideration what that contributes to the narrative. (Very little!) Inadvertently you are reinforcing that Black women need to be perfect or that they need to behave in a way that is understandable and consumable to you.

I've seen a lot of comparisons to QUEENIE (which I haven't read yet), but my mind kept going to PIZZA GIRL as a comp. I thought LUSTER was more evocative and effective though.

September 24, 2020