Skylight

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Publication Date
2014.
Language
English

Description

A previously unpublished novel by a literary master, Skylight tells the intertwined stories of the residents of a faded apartment building in 1940s Lisbon.  Silvestre and Mariana, a happily married elderly couple, take in a young nomad, Abel, and soon discover their many differences. Adriana loves Beethoven more than any man, but her budding sexuality brings new feelings to the surface. Carmen left Galicia to marry humble Emilio, but hates Lisbon and longs for her first love, Manolo. Lidia used to work the streets, but now she’s kept by Paulo, a wealthy man with a wandering eye.

These are just some of the characters in this early work, completed by Saramago in 1953 but never published until now. With his characteristic compassion, depth, and wit, Saramago shows us the quiet contentment of a happy family and the infectious poison of an unhappy one. We see his characters’ most intimate moments as well as the casual encounters particular to neighbors living in close proximity. Skylight is a portrait of ordinary people, painted by a master of the quotidian, a great observer of the immense beauty and profound hardships of the modern world.

More Details

Contributors
Costa, Margaret Jull translator., trl
Saramago, José Author
ISBN
9780544570375
9780544084988
9780544090026

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In the microcosm of a single apartment building, these stylistically complex novels highlight diverse communities by revealing the lives of individuals. Life's freeze-frame, flashback-oriented narrative stands in sharp contrast to the more organic unfolding of Skylight's lyrical, multi-layered narrative. -- NoveList Contributor
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Momentary flashes of insight, joy, and beauty mix with life's bitter cruelties and searing losses in these stylistically complex novels focused on characters who seem tossed by unpredictable fate, but continue to struggle for meaning and love. -- Jen Baker
These moving, character-driven novels examine human relationships: Skylight introduces the residents of a multi-family housing complex in Lisbon, describing their interconnected lives. The Elegance of the Hedgehog infuses the unlikely bond between inhabitants of Parisian apartment complex with philosophical depth. -- NoveList Contributor
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Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
José Saramago and Gabriel Garcia Marquez employ fantastical elements and unusual characters in stories with left-leaning politics, and both exert a graceful mastery over the language -- Saramago's much more experimental than that of Garcia Marquez, but both strongly appealing to readers of sophisticated literary fiction. -- Katherine Johnson
These authors write imaginative, lyrically written, and boldly experimental fiction that blends intimate human psychology, provocative political commentary, and elements of mysticism and magical realism. Their books are sometimes absurdly satirical and often challenging, employing unfamiliar narrative devices and using dense layers of symbolism and allegory. -- Derek Keyser
José Saramago and J. M. Coetzee write haunting, provocative novels that explore social and political issues with stylistically complex, often spare writing. Critically acclaimed novels like Saramago's Blindness and Coetzee's Waiting for the Barbarians are somber, allegorical tales. Elements of science fiction appear in Saramago's writing, while Coetzee's is more realistic. -- Alicia Cavitt
Steven Millhauser and José Saramago write fiction that ranges from the slightly surreal to the unabashedly mythical, and both are guaranteed to captivate readers who value literary style. Saramago's work has a stronger political element, while Millhauser treats a wider range of otherwise ordinary themes. -- Katherine Johnson
Roberto Bolaño and José Saramago write imaginative and challenging stories featuring dazzlingly inventive prose styles, artfully constructed and ambiguous narratives, and incisive political commentary. Through long, gracefully winding sentences, they craft grim depictions of human cruelty and poignant reflections on the human condition. -- Derek Keyser
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China Miéville and José Saramago both insert fantastic elements into settings that more or less resemble real life, allowing their leftist politics to appear in plain view. Mieville uses a complex writing style, while Saramago's is apparently simple but actually quite experimental. Both will satisfy the most discerning literary readers. -- Katherine Johnson
Franz Kafka and José Saramago write with a sense of elegance and power, choosing words with precision. Both address politics head-on in their fiction while creating characters and situations of universal quality. And both use surreal situations and context to emphasize the helplessness of people caught up in incomprehensible events. -- Katherine Johnson
José Saramago and Mario Vargas Llosa imbue their literary fiction with political meaning, writing from the left end of the political spectrum. They also write with an experimental, sophisticated style and employ a deft approach to satire; the situations in which their characters find themselves are often darkly absurd. -- Katherine Johnson
Japanese author Haruki Murakami and Portuguese author Jose Saramagoare are both known for allegorical stories that comment upon the human condition and society and the use of broad metaphors that appeal to an international audience. Both experiment with style and plot structure, though in different ways, with Saramago's novels having a darker overall tone. -- Katherine Johnson
These authors' works are bleak, stylistically complex, and unconventional, and they have the genres "classics" and "psychological fiction"; and have characters that are introspective.

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* In 1953, Saramago submitted a manuscript for a novel to a Portuguese publisher. Thirty-one years old, Saramago was still unknown as a writer; his manuscript was written at night, after his day job. The publisher did not respond not even with a rejection letter and Saramago, discouraged, published nothing for another 20 years. Decades later, after Saramago was well on his way to literary prominence, the manuscript resurfaced, accompanied by a publication offer, which Saramago curtly declined. He would continue to decline publication offers for the lost novel until his death, in 2010. The novel (Claraboya in its original title) depicts the residents of a Lisbon apartment building grappling with their own frustrated longings and ambitions. A Spanish woman in an unhappy marriage dreams of escaping back to her homeland; a philosophical wanderer grapples with loneliness and lack of purpose; an aging kept woman loses her man to a younger neighbor; a loutish husband brutalizes his wife. It is a work about the strictures of poverty and domesticity but also about momentary glimpses of beauty and fulfillment, and as such, it is immediately recognizable as Saramago, even though his political emphases, and his syntax, would evolve over the years. It will be bittersweet delight for Saramago fans, as this selection may well be his final published work.--Driscoll, Brendan Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Completed in 1953 but not released in the author's native Portuguese until 2011 (and appearing here in English for the first time), this early novel from Nobel winner Saramago (Blindness) details the day-to-day exploits of several families and individuals living in an apartment building in Lisbon. Silvestre, a cobbler, and his wife take in a young boarder named Abel. As time passes, the two men launch into a series of conversations on philosophy and existence. Troubled marriages lurk behind the doors of Caetano and Justina-he's a jealous womanizer, while she continues to mourn the death of their daughter-and of Emílio and Carmen, who quarrel over their young son. Seamstress sisters Isaura and Adriana, living with their mother and aunt, find themselves confused after a night of romantic indiscretion. And Lídia, a kept woman, begins to question her lover's intentions after she convinces him to offer a job to her neighbor, a beautiful 19-year-old. Throughout, characters intersect, yet their narratives often proceed without creating a tangled web, making the novel more resemble a linked collection. Saramago, who was still a novice in the 1950s, pads some moments and lingers a bit too long on minor episodes, but overall, the novel spins a series of frank, honest stories that strike deep. This translation offers fans the opportunity to read the pages that helped shape a master. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

Starred Review. Nobel Prize winner Saramago's never-before-published first novel is an insightful and surprisingly suspenseful story about the tenants in a Lisbon apartment building in 1952. The characters range from Silvestre, the philosopher/cobbler, and his wife, who rent out a room to a young drifter; Lidia, a kept woman, whose lover begins to fancy a younger neighbor; Carmen and Emilio, an unhappy couple whose son is caught in the middle; grieving Justina and adulterer Caetano, who both loathe and desire each other; and sisters Adriana and Isaura, who struggle to keep a sexual secret from their aunt and mother. The daily routines and concerns of each family are rendered with touching detail and are captivating reading in their own right. But soon the complications of life lend an urgency to each character's story that makes this book hard to put down. This novel deals with the quintessential issues of life-love in all its forms, the death of body and soul, the desire for meaning and happiness-set within the simplest of circumstances. VERDICT Saramago's novel is a delightful creation of characters with universal appeal. Readers will want to explore his other works after reading this gem. [See Prepub Alert, 6/8/14.]-Joy Humphrey, Pepperdine Univ. Law Lib., Malibu, CA (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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Kirkus Book Review

Rarely has a novel with a publication delayed as long as this one's proven such a pleasure. The so-called "Lost Novel" by the Nobel Prize-winning Portuguese author has a peculiar history. Saramago (Blindness, 1995, etc.) submitted the book, likely written in the late 1940s or early '50s, for publication in 1953. He never received an acceptance or rejection from the publisher; instead, the manuscript by the then-unknown novelist just sat there. It didn't resurface until 1989, when the publisher discovered the manuscript while moving offices and informed the now-renowned author that it would be eager to publish this early work. He refused, apparently because it was a painful reminder of his struggling days, and didn't want it published during his lifetime. Since his death in 2010, it's been well-received wherever it's been published, suggesting that quality was not the issue. Unlike the author's later allegories, this is more of a dark romantic comedy with philosophical undertones, set in an apartment building occupied by six families. A cobbler and his wife, the only happy couple here, take in a young lodger who has a sense of his destiny unfettered by the usual entanglements: "I have the sense that life, real life, is hidden behind a curtain, roaring with laughter at our efforts to get to know it. And I want to know life." Occupying the other apartments are two married couples, a kept woman, two young sisters with their mother and aunt, and a family with a beautiful young daughter. After introducing all these characters in a confusing rush, the novel lets the reader sort them out as various entanglements reveal themselves, some more interesting than others. Ultimately, the young boarder comes to suspect that "the hidden meaning of life is that life has no hidden meaning." More conventional and less political than the later work that established the author's reputation but an early sign of considerable promise and spirited storytelling. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* In 1953, Saramago submitted a manuscript for a novel to a Portuguese publisher. Thirty-one years old, Saramago was still unknown as a writer; his manuscript was written at night, after his day job. The publisher did not respond—not even with a rejection letter—and Saramago, discouraged, published nothing for another 20 years. Decades later, after Saramago was well on his way to literary prominence, the manuscript resurfaced, accompanied by a publication offer, which Saramago curtly declined. He would continue to decline publication offers for the "lost novel" until his death, in 2010. The novel (Claraboya in its original title) depicts the residents of a Lisbon apartment building grappling with their own frustrated longings and ambitions. A Spanish woman in an unhappy marriage dreams of escaping back to her homeland; a philosophical wanderer grapples with loneliness and lack of purpose; an aging "kept woman" loses her man to a younger neighbor; a loutish husband brutalizes his wife. It is a work about the strictures of poverty and domesticity but also about momentary glimpses of beauty and fulfillment, and as such, it is immediately recognizable as Saramago, even though his political emphases, and his syntax, would evolve over the years. It will be bittersweet delight for Saramago fans, as this selection may well be his final published work. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

This is the first work ever by Nobel Laureate Saramago, and it was left unpublished in his widow's care at his death. The setting is a rundown Lisbon apartment building directly after World War II, with the narrative daisy-chaining the stories of several residents, from Beethoven-loving Adriana, who is just discovering her sensuality; to Carmen, who's come to Lisbon to marry Emilio and isn't that happy; to an elderly couple who take in a runaway. Not a huge first printing but obviously of interest because it lays the groundwork for Saramago's later achievements.

[Page 54]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Library Journal Reviews

Nobel Prize winner Saramago's never-before-published first novel is an insightful and surprisingly suspenseful story about the tenants in a Lisbon apartment building in 1952. The characters range from Silvestre, the philosopher/cobbler, and his wife, who rent out a room to a young drifter; Lídia, a kept woman, whose lover begins to fancy a younger neighbor; Carmen and Emílio, an unhappy couple whose son is caught in the middle; grieving Justina and adulterer Caetano, who both loathe and desire each other; and sisters Adriana and Isaura, who struggle to keep a sexual secret from their aunt and mother. The daily routines and concerns of each family are rendered with touching detail and are captivating reading in their own right. But soon the complications of life lend an urgency to each character's story that makes this book hard to put down. This novel deals with the quintessential issues of life—love in all its forms, the death of body and soul, the desire for meaning and happiness—set within the simplest of circumstances. VERDICT Saramago's novel is a delightful creation of characters with universal appeal. Readers will want to explore his other works after reading this gem. [See Prepub Alert, 6/8/14.]—Joy Humphrey, Pepperdine Univ. Law Lib., Malibu, CA

[Page 82]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Completed in 1953 but not released in the author's native Portuguese until 2011 (and appearing here in English for the first time), this early novel from Nobel winner Saramago (Blindness) details the day-to-day exploits of several families and individuals living in an apartment building in Lisbon. Silvestre, a cobbler, and his wife take in a young boarder named Abel. As time passes, the two men launch into a series of conversations on philosophy and existence. Troubled marriages lurk behind the doors of Caetano and Justina—he's a jealous womanizer, while she continues to mourn the death of their daughter—and of Emílio and Carmen, who quarrel over their young son. Seamstress sisters Isaura and Adriana, living with their mother and aunt, find themselves confused after a night of romantic indiscretion. And Lídia, a kept woman, begins to question her lover's intentions after she convinces him to offer a job to her neighbor, a beautiful 19-year-old. Throughout, characters intersect, yet their narratives often proceed without creating a tangled web, making the novel more resemble a linked collection. Saramago, who was still a novice in the 1950s, pads some moments and lingers a bit too long on minor episodes, but overall, the novel spins a series of frank, honest stories that strike deep. This translation offers fans the opportunity to read the pages that helped shape a master. (Dec.)

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