Born in Tbilisi in 1983, Nino Haratischwili is a multiple-award-winning novelist and dramatist and one of the most important authors of contemporary German literature. She is the author of the worldwide bestseller The Eighth Life (for Brilka), which was translated into numerous languages and nominated for the International Booker Prize, and The Cat and the General, which was shortlisted for the German Book Prize. Nino Haratischwili lives in Berlin.
“This story of four young friends in 1990’s Georgia took me back to my own childhood in Cuba. The Lack of Light is a novel that thrills you, the kind you can't put down. Nino Haratischwili grips you from the first page with an intensity that only great writers can achieve.” — Armando Lucas Correa, author of the international bestseller The German Girl “Haratischwili enchants with this monumental novel that follows four friends in Georgia from the end of the Soviet era to the near present. . . . [An] explosive and intimate tale of the women's struggle to not only survive but thrive . . . Readers will find [The Lack of Light] irresistible.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review) “A thrilling, heartbreaking, unforgettable story. Not a page too long.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Peopled with unforgettable characters and told through a careful compilation of intimate details, The Lack of Light is a story of resilience, creativity and friendship set against the chaos of civil war and destruction.” — BookPage (starred review) “An epic, edge-of-the-seat tale of friendship and political chaos.” — Financial Times “Catnip for Ferrante fans.” — Boston Globe “Compelling . . . the visceral story of a quartet of women facing down the violence of history . . . for fans of Elena Ferrante.” — Library Journal “Brilliant. [The Lack of Light] dazzles, first and foremost, by its epic scale: over 700 pages, a dozen characters, a human fresco spanning more than thirty years, and fascinating . . . at once Russian in its existential ardor and German in its psychological depth . . . a great novel about rebellion, about the attempt and temptation to live.” — Le Figaro “Remember this name: Nino Haratischwili . . . a formidable storyteller . . . The Lack of Light is a novel that devours the reader even as the reader devours it . . . Haratischwili manages to sew together the euphoria of intimacy with the brutality of politics. Masterfully. Without ever stifling the characters' warmth of hope.” — Le Monde “[The Lack of Light] features a whirlwind cast of supporting characters that bring to mind the spellbinding atmospheres of Orhan Pamuk's novels. But it is above all Elena Ferrante who seems to be whispering in Nino Haratischwili's ear, as she recounts the tormented lives of these prodigious new friends. Her radiant novel is the splendid gift of this literary season.” — L'OBS Praise for Nino Haratischwili's The Eighth Life (for Brilka) — “Something rather extraordinary happened. The world fell away and I fell, wholly, happily, into the book… My breath caught in my throat, tears nestled in my lashes… devastatingly brilliant.” — New York Times Book Review “A harrowing, heartening and utterly engrossing epic novel … astonishing.” — The Guardian “In heartfelt prose, Haratischwili seamlessly weaves the political upheaval around the characters into the love and loss in their lives. Haratischwili’s epic portrait of a close-knit family doubles as a stunning tribute to the power of resilience.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review) “A lavish banquet of family stories that can, for all their sorrows, be devoured with gluttonous delight. Nino Haratischwili’s characters . . . come to exuberant life. Her huge novel . . . shows a double face, its crushing pain and loss nonetheless conveyed with an artful storyteller’s sheer joy in her craft.” — Financial Times “This novel has generated substantial industry buzz and international critical praise. Both are justified… The Eighth Life―the story of a family, a country, a century―is an imaginative, expansive, and important read.” — Booklist (starred review)