The Light of the Fireflies by Paul Pen (translated by Simon Bruni) is a haunting, yet hopeful, tale of discovering light in the darkest places. The boy, 11, spent his entire life underground, in a basement with his parents, grandmother, older sister and older brother. Before he was born, his family was disfigured by a fire with his sister wearing a mask to cover her burns. He spends hours with his cactus plant, reading a book on insects or touching the one ray of light that filters through a crack in the ceiling. When his sister has a baby, everyone’s behavior becomes very strange. The boy begins to wonder why the baby’s father is never mentioned. What events led to them living in the basement and why do they have to be shut away? When fireflies find their way into the basement, the light makes the boy want to escape, to know the outside world. But the doors are all locked and he doesn’t know how to get out. Can he find a way to escape?
I started to read this book a couple years ago and had to put it away. The book was strange and hard to follow. Recently, I decided to pick it up again and I’m glad I did. The Light of the Fireflies is a haunting, twisted tale of one family hiding from the world. The reader discovers with the boy why they are hiding. Are they hiding because they fear the world? Or are they hiding from a darker secret? Overall, I enjoyed the story but it is very heavy reading that takes concentration and a certain frame of mind to imagine life in a basement and the secrets behind this family’s motivations. I enjoyed the boy as he is the only one who does not know what the outside world is, the rest of the family manipulates him according to his or her own motivations. He is the one with the drive to discover the truth behind their situation and their stories are starting to contradict each other and lack sense. I recommend The Light of the Fireflies.The Light of the Fireflies is available in paperback, eBook and audiobook.
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