SHOBHA RAO: GIRLS BURN BRIGHTER
SHOBHA RAO: GIRLS BURN BRIGHTER book cover

SHOBHA RAO: GIRLS BURN BRIGHTER

Paperback – March 5, 2019

Price
$10.59
Format
Paperback
Pages
416
Publisher
Flatiron Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250309501
Dimensions
5.5 x 1.11 x 8.21 inches
Weight
12 ounces

Description

One of the Best Books of 2018 – So Far (PopSugar) One of the Best Books of the Month ( Harper’s Bazaar , Entertainment Weekly , Bustle, Vulture, PureWow, Paste, Book Riot, Signature Reads, and The Chicago Review of Books ) A Most Anticipated Book of 2018 (Goodreads, Bustle, Huffington Post, Cosmopolitan, BookRiot, PopSugar, The Chicago Review of Books, Ms. Magazine, Seattle Post-Intelligencer ) “The debut novelist who has everyone talking this spring....The blurb on the cover of Shobha Rao’s Girls Burn Brighter uses a very particular and descriptive phrase by fellow author Charlie Jane Anders to describe what happens after reading the book: ‘Heart shards everywhere.’ If truer words have ever been spoken about the way a novel made us feel, we’d be hard-pressed to find them.” ― Entertainment Weekly “Engrossing…The pages keep turning, the language is lyrical and lovely, and many phrases call for pause and appreciation…Rao is a capable and confident writer, able to handle a vast and ambitious story line.” ― The New York Times Book Review “Skillfully rendered…. What’s most memorable about the novel, however, is the unadulterated, feminist voice.” ― San Francisco Chronicle “Shobha Rao writes cleanly and eloquently about women who, without their brightness, might have been left to die in their beds. She writes them into life, into existence, into the light of day.” ― Los Angeles Times “Incandescent...A searing portrait of what feminism looks like in much of the world.” ― Vogue “An incredibly raw and compelling story about two young girls who forge a strong bond while weaving saris in a small Indian village plagued by sexism and misogyny.” ― InStyle “Unforgettable.” ― Lit Hub “This debut novel is a compelling story of unbreakable friendship...” ― Real Simple “A devastating debut, Girls Burn Brighter is a testament to the strength of female friendship…. Shobha Rao astounds in her debut novel, not just with stunning prose, but with mastery of pacing, too. In Rao’s hands the heavy, unrelenting subject matter, which might otherwise have been shattering for its raw honesty, is fluid and propulsive.” ― Shelf Awareness “Burns with intensity…Rao…is clearly a writer of great ambition.” ― USA Today “A definite must-read for readers who love authors like Nadia Hashimi and Khaled Hosseini.” ―Bustle “A treat for Ferrante fans, exploring the bonds of friendship and how female ambition beats against the strictures of poverty and patriarchal societies.” ―The Huffington Post “An unbelievably beautiful and harrowing story of friendship and devotion.” ― Book Riot “Harrowing and beautiful.... Trust us―your book club will want to know Rao's name.” ― BookPage “A beautiful testament to female friendship.” ― PopSugar “The book has enormous emotional power and a compelling narrative that will carry the reader through to its unsettling conclusion.... The novel is a powerful testament to how something as seemingly small as a private friendship between two girls can be a tool to resist oppression.” ― Dallas Morning News “ Girls Burn Brighter is the kind of book you open and fall into…Rao’s debut is a high achievement.” ―KQED, San Francisco “ Girls Burn Brighter is an absolutely stunning debut novel from an author you’ll want to follow for years to come.” ―Paste “This debut novel is the perfect read for fans of Rupi Kaur.” ―Brit + Co “Rao layers her debut novel with issues that face many young women worldwide, from street harassment and domestic abuse to oppressive societal norms.” ―Ms. Magazine “The two fierce young women draw you in with their resilience and hope, and their enduring bond will both inspire and break readers’ hearts.” ― Apartment Therapy “Unshakeable…the power and anguish in Rao’s novel builds, breaking your heart on one page even as it mends it, stronger, on the next.” ― Omnivoracious “A confident debut novel set in India and America about the unbreakable bond between two girls. From the menacing nooks of India's underworld to the streets of Seattle, this searing novel traces the nuances of adulthood and the enduring power of childhood bonds.” ― The Chicago Review of Books “Enchanting… The resplendent prose captures the nuances and intensity of two best friends on the brink of an uncertain and precarious adulthood… An incisive study of a friendship’s unbreakable bond.” ― Kirkus Reviews , starred review “This powerful, heart-wrenching novel and its two unforgettable heroines offer an extraordinary example of the strength that can be summoned in even the most terrible situations.” ― Booklist , starred review “Highly recommended for book discussion groups, this tale of sacrifice, exploitation, and reclamation is not to be missed.” ― Library Journal , starred review “Stirring…affecting…The narrative’s thematic consistency and emotional urgency will pull readers along.” ― Publishers Weekly “Rao writes exquisite sentences…By the end of Girls Burn Brighter , Poornima and Savitha earn their places in the hearts of readers.” ― Woodbury Magazine “This novel burnt up my weekend. With beautiful language, warm friendships, and vivid images, once I started reading I could not stop. It’s a story of struggle and survival. Female friendship is the lifeline.” ― Claire Cameron, author of The Bear and The Last Neanderthal “ Girls Burn Brighter by Shobha Rao blew my heart up. Heart-shards everywhere. I am in awe of the warmth and humanity in this book, even as it explores some incredibly dark places. I’m going to be thinking about Girls Burn Brighter for a while, and you’re going to be hearing a lot about it.” ―Charlie Jane Anders, author of All the Birds in the Sky SHOBHA RAO moved to the U.S. from India at the age of seven. She is the winner of the 2014 Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Fiction, awarded by Nimrod International Journal. She has been a resident at Hedgebrook and is the recipient of the Elizabeth George Foundation fellowship. Her story "Kavitha and Mustafa" was chosen by T.C. Boyle for inclusion in the Best American Short Stories 2015 . She lives in San Francisco. An Unrestored Woman is her debut.

Features & Highlights

  • Best Book of the Year:
  • The Washington Post
  • , NPR, Shelf Awareness, Paste, LitHub,
  • Real Simple
  • 2018 Goodreads Choice Awards Finalist: Best Fiction
  • Longlisted for the 2018 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize
  • “Incandescent...A searing portrait of what feminism looks like in much of the world.” ―
  • Vogue
  • “A treat for Ferrante fans, exploring the bonds of friendship and how female ambition beats against the strictures of poverty and patriarchal societies.” ―The Huffington Post
  • An electrifying debut novel about the extraordinary bond between two girls driven apart by circumstance but relentless in their search for one another.
  • Poornima and Savitha have three strikes against them: they are poor, they are ambitious, and they are girls. After her mother’s death, Poornima has very little kindness in her life. She is left to care for her siblings until her father can find her a suitable match. So when Savitha enters their household, Poornima is intrigued by the joyful, independent-minded girl. Suddenly their Indian village doesn't feel quite so claustrophobic, and Poornima begins to imagine a life beyond arranged marriage. But when a devastating act of cruelty drives Savitha away, Poornima leaves behind everything she has ever known to find her friend. Her journey takes her into the darkest corners of India's underworld, on a harrowing cross-continental journey, and eventually to an apartment complex in Seattle. Alternating between the girls’ perspectives as they face ruthless obstacles, Shobha Rao's
  • Girls Burn Brighter
  • introduces two heroines who never lose the hope that burns within.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(898)
★★★★
25%
(748)
★★★
15%
(449)
★★
7%
(210)
23%
(688)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Nothing happy. Nothing.

I read this book because it was part of our Book Club and it was the first book that our book club leader picked; chosen purely out of reviews, and not knowing exactly what it was about. This was clearly not my genre nor what I usually like reading. I will say that it was well written with a lot of symbolism, however... TRIGGERS. DETAILED TRIGGERS EVERYWHERE. Hatred of women. Rape. Drugs. Human trafficking. Torture. I had to skip through scenes because it made me super uncomfortable and upset. It's savage and pure evil what happens to these girls AND the end doesn't help.
1 people found this helpful
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Gratuitous

I ordered this book for book club and found the first half engrossing. Beautifully written. The second half was not as well conceived. The amount of awful things happening to the characters become onerous. I didn't see where they helped with plot nor story. Overall, meh. However the plight of girls in Asia is one we should pay attention to and the horrors of human trafficking need to be brought to light. I hat wish the second half of the book Lee us on the journey the first half did.
1 people found this helpful
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Compelling and Gorgeous

"Girls Burn Brighter" is a compelling story, and the prose is gorgeous. We should all be so fortunate as to have a friendship like that of Poormina and Savitha.
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One line ending

I got a few chapters in and felt like the book wasn't going to be a great book just a time filler, but I had already started it and had to finish. It started to pick up in the middle, thought it would get better. Just to have an actual one line ending! One line. That's how the book ends. And not like a cliff hanger one line ending. Just allll that for one line.
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take content warnings seriously and tread carefully

Girls Burn Brighter by Shobha Rao

What I Didn’t Like:
-Ending. I like endings that leave me wondering, thinking, and craving more. I felt like this one needed ONE more sentence and it would’ve been perfect. Just one more. There are a lot of people who are going to think we need a LOT more. Again, I like endings that leave me craving more. I just wanted one final sentence. Perhaps something beautiful that tied up the plot with that gorgeous language that ran the entire book.
-Really, really, dark. The book deals with human trafficking, rape, and abuse of women in general. It takes a realistic look at these problems, which I will come back to, but it does it in a way that feels too heavy most of the time. There’s no big message or silver lining, it's just dark. It’s hard to read.
-Characters are too similar. With the exception of the banana thing, there’s nothing concrete to separate one main character from the other. In fact, they begin to blend into one character. I’m not entirely sure that was the point either, which was my initial thought. Really, I wanted them to have personality quirks that made them different and the work was poorer because they didn’t have them.

What I Did Like:
-Depiction of the way women are treated in India is eye opening. I cannot speak to whether it’s accurate, but I can say that it felt that way. It felt raw and important, heavy and eye opening.
-The idea of finding one thing to live for among horrors is present. These girls go THROUGH IT and through it all they keep their eyes on the idea that their friendship will reunite them again. It’s the idea that you just need one reason to keep living, one reason to keep fighting. Really, it’s a beautiful idea. I would’ve liked to see that played with even more, but I digress.
-Beautiful language. This author does a wonderful job of describing things and painting you a picture with her words. It’s gorgeously well written and lyrical.

The Verdict: 3 stars. You have to be careful here, this is not the kind of book everyone will love. It’s dark and heavy, take content warnings seriously and tread carefully.
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Excellent- TW

Gorgeous story about friendship, empowerment and strong women. TW- Trigger Warning: trauma, violence, SA
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Feels like the intended purpose was to make a movie, not write a novel.

Don't get fooled by the "inspiring" title. It is a tad Too dark - more towards the title of the book depicts pain and suffering.
That said, it was a decent read, well written.

Good engaging read. You will need a 'cleanse' read to lighten up after you finish this.
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Things in life aren't aways pretty. That doesn't mean you should look away.

This book is hard. It is just as hard to stomach as it is to put down. When you think things can't get any worse they do. It was a not a beautiful story, but it was beautifully written and it has a powerful message the reader needs to take away. Born at a different place in a different social order this could be any woman. It helps bring to light customs and treatment of women and what we need to do to help. I can't say I loved this book. It was hard. But many things in life are. Life isn't always pretty but that doesn't mean we should look away. Everyone should read this.
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Yes!! Read it!!

Read this book. It’s AMAZING!
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Daughter loves it!

Daughter love d the series