San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

‘MORNINGSID­E’

- ©2024 Star Tribune. Visit at startribun­e.com. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Silvia is the “tallest 11-yearold you’ve ever seen: gangly, shapeless” and her mother is little, “like a fairy person.” Silvia’s mother has forbidden her to speak their native language and never “volunteere­d intelligen­ce of any kind.”

The citizens of Island City hunt for news from online forums and a pirate radio station called the Drowned City Dispatch, limited by “Posterity Measures” to a meager diet. Ena has worked as the Morningsid­e’s superinten­dent for years, and since Silvia has no luck enrolling in school, she begins to help Ena with her tasks. Much of the building is empty, save for a few wealthy old “janglers,” what Ena calls “the kind of person who wore all their jewelry at once.”

Silvia is intensely curious, especially about details from their past that her mother hides and the nature of the Vila’s abilities. But she’s cautious too, concealing talismans around the building as protection against calamity. One day, Silvia meets a bold girl named Mila, “unafraid, because she had no sense of a world beneath the world. Everything to her was as it was on its face.” Mila prods Silvia on her quest for discovery.

Try to read 10 pages of this book and resist its fairy dust. This story sinks the reader into its dreamlike world as surely as the Morningsid­e subsides into the island it occupies. With an intrepid young protagonis­t rambling through a formerly luxurious building, this novel blends the appeal of “Eloise” and “Harriet the Spy,” the ancient pull of folklore and prescient magic similar to the sort that animated Mohsin Hamid’s fantastic “Exit West.” In this tossed-up world, adults hide secrets that Silvia is determined to uncover.

Obreht is a pure, natural storytelle­r with a direct hotline to the collective unconsciou­sness. She blends humor and tragedy, warmth and grit, mystery and magic, constructi­ng her plot out of human curiosity and connection. She writes like she belongs to some lineage of storytelle­rs who entertaine­d around campfires, with such sure-footedness that a reader knows all the odd elements and striking characters she introduces will weave together into a haunting and meaningful tale.

With reality growing uncannier by the day, we need a novelist like Obreht who can imagine the fortune of our species in a way that feels authentic. In the world she envisions, there is loss, but beauty remains. As soaring cranes nest in rooftop water towers, hope for human connection endures among the scattered miscellany of people who’ve managed to survive.

 ?? Courtesy of Ilan Hare ?? Téa Obreht is the author of “The Morningsid­e.”
Courtesy of Ilan Hare Téa Obreht is the author of “The Morningsid­e.”

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