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The Hour of the Star
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About the Author

Clarice Lispector was born in 1920 to a Jewish family in western Ukraine. As a result of the anti-Semitic violence they endured, the family fled to Brazil in 1922, and Clarice Lispector grew up in Recife. Following the death of her mother when Clarice was nine, she moved to Rio de Janeiro with her father and two sisters, and she went on to study law. With her husband, who worked for the foreign service, she lived in Italy, Switzerland, England, and the United States, until they separated and she returned to Rio in 1959; she died there in 1977. Since her death, Clarice Lispector has earned universal recognition as Brazil's greatest modern writer. Benjamin Moser is the author of Why This World: A Biography of Clarice Lispector, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics' Circle Award, and is also the editor of a new translation of Clarice Lispector's work, of which this is the sixth volume. A former books columnist at Harper's Magazine, Moser is now a columnist at The New York Times Book Review, and is currently at work on the authorized biography of Susan Sontag. He lives in the Netherlands. Colm Toibin is the author of many novels, including The Master, which portrays Henry James's friendship with Woolson.

Reviews

"Lispector is the premier Latin American woman prose writer of this century." -- The New York Times "A genius of character and a literary magician." -- Publishers Weekly "An artist of vivid imagination. If her work is thoughtful and poetic, distinguished by touching insight and human sympathy, it is also full of irony and wild humor." -- Saturday Review "If she does - dare I say it? - touch you, she touches you like nothing else you've ever read." -- Benjamin Mosher - Vanity Fair "In less than one hundred pages, Clarice Lispector tells a brilliantly multi-faceted and searing story." -- Jesse Larsen - 500 Great Books by Women "I felt physically jolted by genius." -- Katherine Boo "This text investigates the knowledge of not knowing and the rich poverty of the inner void with stratagems of obfuscation, leaps of language, and suspensions of syntax and form that are perhaps best received by the gut." -- The Faster Times "The reader finds herself in the throes of a master, rendered speechless with awe and terror." -- The Brooklyn Rail "The only antidote to stupidity is an agitated intelligence constantly prowling for blank spots in one's outward seeming. The Hour of the Star is a romance, then, between stupidity and its neurotic observer, a restless stretching away from form, tradition, and the stupefying rules they impose on writing." -- The New Inquiry "This is without a doubt one of the most audacious and affecting works of fiction I've ever read." -- Barnes and Noble Review "A new translation of Clarice Lispector's searing last novel, The Hour of the Star by Lispector biographer Benjamin Moser-with an introduction by Colm Toibin-reveals the mesmerizing force of the revitalized modernist's Rio-set tale of a young naif, who, along with the piquantly intrusive narrator, challenges the reader's notions of identity, storytelling, and love." -- Vogue.com "In this slim novella, Lispector uses an intricate narrative structure in order to represent a peculiar state of mind. Rodrigo, a well-off and cultured man, struggles to tell the story of the sad life of Macabea, an unhygienic, sickly, unlovable, and an altogether "un-ideal" typist living in the slums of Rio de Janeiro. Although Rodrigo claims he's the only person who could love Macabea-if only because she's the subject of his narrative-he really tells her story as a way to thwart his own isolation. Lispector employs odd sentence fragments and erratic grammatical choices to highlight the importance of imagination as a means for her characters to liberate themselves from their banal existences. Through Rodrigo's narrative, Lispector artfully ponders the fate of her characters, and their fears and desires, in a harsh and unforgiving cityscape. Startlingly original and profoundly sad, The Hour of the Star is a provocative work by a highly influential author who should be more widely read." -- Jeff Brewer - Critical Mob "The Hour of the Star trips up our concept of the novel. What a story is expected to do. How characters act. Why writers write. Why readers read. It's an experience you won't forget." -- Charles Larson - Counter Punch "A truly remarkable writer." -- Jonathan Franzen

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