“Reading this book felt like watching some rare celestial event: sky-big, beautiful and strangely tender, and full of a kind of magic at the edge of things that’s impossible to describe and changes you forever to witness.” —Amber Sparks, author of And I Do Not Forgive You
“Peter Geye’s A Lesser Light has elemental forces within it, powered by weather, Lake Superior, and the conflicts of religion and the heart in the early parts of the twentieth century. This book has qualities that may remind some readers of the novels of Thomas Hardy: a strong woman who is far from the life of the crowd, a detailed attention to work, and a fascinating cast of major and minor characters. This novel is a great feat of literary imagination.” —Charles Baxter, author of Blood Test
“In this tempest of a novel, Peter Geye has bound together husband and wife on the bleak cliffside of an ill-suited marriage, where wolves howl, shipwrecks haunt, lovers meet in secret, and hope arcs in stardust. I will never forget this achingly beautiful story with its prose that sings through the soul.” —Carol Dunbar, author of The Net Beneath Us
“Once again, Peter Geye has gifted us with his literary wizardry. In A Lesser Light, he led me on a time-travel journey that transported me back in time to the landscape of northern Minnesota in 1910 and immersed me in the lives of a deeply troubled couple whose antics kept me gasping at the turn of every page.” —Carolyn Holbrook, author of Tell Me Your Names and I Will Testify
“In A Lesser Light, Peter Geye paints an unforgettable picture of Minnesota, one in which history leaps to life. This wonderful book presents a completely immersive and absorbing world, masterfully rendered. With tenderness, humor, and deep insight, Geye traces the paths of a community living around and in service to a lighthouse, among them a stern and religious keeper; his prickly, lonely new wife; a local man unexpectedly a guardian to his orphaned niece; and the niece herself, each of them keeping secrets and struggling to face the future. Their choices make for a surprising literary page-turner that—like all good historical fiction—teaches us how to live in the present.” —V.V. Ganeshananthan, author of Brotherless Night