August 11, 2020

Aimee Bender

Harvard Book Store's virtual event series welcomes AIMEE BENDER—author of the bestselling story collection The Girl in the Flammable Skirt, and the novel The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake—for a discussion of her latest, highly anticipated novel The Butterfly Lampshade. She will be joined in conversation by Kelly Luce, author of the acclaimed novel Pull Me Under.

Details

On the night her single mother is taken to a mental hospital after a psychotic episode, eight year-old Francie is staying with her babysitter, waiting to take the train to Los Angeles to go live with her aunt and uncle. There is a lovely lamp next to the couch on which she's sleeping, the shade adorned with butterflies. When she wakes, Francie spies a dead butterfly, exactly matching the ones on the lamp, floating in a glass of water. She drinks it before the babysitter can see.

Twenty years later, Francie is compelled to make sense of that moment, and two other incidents—her discovery of a desiccated beetle from a school paper, and a bouquet of dried roses from some curtains. Her recall is exact—she is sure these things happened. But despite her certainty, she wrestles with the hold these memories maintain over her, and what they say about her own place in the world.

As Francie conjures her past and reduces her engagement with the world to a bare minimum, she begins to question her relationship to reality. The scenes set in Francie's past glow with the intensity of childhood perception, how physical objects can take on an otherworldly power. The question for Francie is, What do these events signify? And does this power survive childhood?

Told in the lush, lilting prose that led the San Francisco Chronicle to say Aimee Bender is "a writer who makes you grateful for the very existence of language," The Butterfly Lampshade is a heartfelt and heartbreaking examination of the sometimes overwhelming power of the material world, and a broken love between mother and child.

About Author(s)

Aimee Bender is the author of the novels The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake—a New York Times bestseller—and An Invisible Sign of My Own, and of the collections The Girl in the Flammable SkirtWillful Creatures, and The Color Master. Her works have been widely anthologized and have been translated into sixteen languages. She lives in Los Angeles.

Kelly Luce is the author of Three Scenarios in Which Hana Sasaki Grows a Tail, winner of Foreword Review’s Editor’s Choice Prize for Fiction, and the novel Pull Me Under, a Book of the Month Club selection and one of Elle’s Best Books of 2016. Her work has been recognized by fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Ucross Foundation, and has appeared in New York MagazineChicago TribuneSalon, and other publications. She received an MFA from the Michener Center for Writers at UT Austin in 2015. She is the editor of The Commuter at Electric Literature and was a 2016-17 fellow at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.