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The Sun Was Electric Light by Rachel Morton

Literary fiction

The Sun Was Electric Light

Only at BOTM
Debut

by Rachel Morton

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Quick take

A poignant meditation on friendship, found family, and how to move through the world when you’ve lost your way.

Highbrow

Only at BOTM

Only available at Book of the Month. You won’t find it elsewhere in the US or Canada.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, LGBTQ_themes

    LGBTQ+ themes

  • Illustrated icon, Cerebral

    Cerebral

  • Illustrated icon, International

    International

  • Illustrated icon, Serious

    Serious

Synopsis

Disillusioned with her life in New York, Ruth returns to a lake town in Guatemala where she had been happy a decade earlier. There, in Panajachel, she meets two very different women: the calm and practical Emilie, and the turbulent and intoxicating Carmen. Deciding to stay and build a life at the lake, Ruth finds work first as a nanny to a wealthy local family, then as an English teacher at a village school. Meanwhile, she becomes increasingly infatuated by her friendship with Carmen, pushing away the stability of her connection with Emilie. As Carmen’s fragile relationship with the world splinters, the difference between being a visitor and truly belonging becomes clear, and Ruth is forced to act.

Content warning

This book contains mentions of suicidal ideation.

Free sample

Get an early look from the first pages of The Sun Was Electric Light.

The Sun Was Electric Light

1

I met Carmen when I wasn’t well and had gone to the lake for the second time. The first time I went was ten years ago, when I still thought life would bring me things. Life had seemed to bring other people things, and I thought it might bring them to me. I didn’t know it was too late for all that, even though I was still very young.

I met Dwain in the expat bars, and it was through Dwain that I met Carmen. Carmen had lived at the lake all her life. When I first met her, she seemed like a queen. She was haughty and she was arrogant and she had the most beautiful hair. Later on, I saw her differently, but that was how she seemed when we first met.

I went to the lake because my life in New York hadn’t worked out, and my life before that hadn’t worked either. On the outside I seemed to be functioning well, but inside I had the feeling that nothing had meaning and also that everything was fake. Even the waves of the sea looked fake. I knew the waves of the sea were real, but when I looked at them from the side of the boat on the way home from a camping trip, they looked fake, as though we were on a movie set and the sea was a giant swimming pool and the sun was electric light. Nothing seemed real, and to feel real, I imagined, was the fundamental thing, the thing you needed before anything else can begin. I thought if I was going to fix my life, I would need to get to where things felt real.

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Why I love it

I think we’ve all had those fantasies of uprooting our lives and starting over somewhere new and different where we can reinvent ourselves from scratch. The Sun Was Electric Light is a study in the way a new environment can shape us and push us to evolve, but also in the ways that the old maxim “wherever you go, there you are” continues to hold true.

Ruth has been suffering from a chronic low-level dissatisfaction with her life. The kind of ennui where nothing is wrong, but it’s not right either. In an attempt to find a life that feels like truly living, she leaves New York for a lake town in Guatemala. She befriends two locals: the directionless Dwain and the elusive, mercurial Carmen. As their friendship develops, Ruth begins to understand the darker side of her new town and the complexities of belonging.

At its core, The Sun Was Electric Light is about deciding whether to opt in or out of life, the desire to build a life that amounts to more than just passing the time, and the people we choose to take with us. Unflinchingly honest and vividly written, this is literary fiction at its finest.

Member ratings (43)

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The Sun Was Electric Light
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Passion Project
Six Days in Bombay