cover image Twenty After Midnight

Twenty After Midnight

Daniel Galera, trans. from the Portuguese by Julia Sanches. Penguin, $16 trade paper (224p) ISBN 978-0-735-22479-7

Brazilian writer Galera’s thoughtful, bittersweet novel (after Blood-Drenched Beard) tackles the ephemeral nature of friendship. Emiliano, 39, struggles to pay the rent on his São Paulo apartment and to finish his doctorate. He’s lost touch with a group of friends from college, with whom he launched Orangutan, a webzine. The shocking murder of their friend Andrei “Duke” Dukelsky triggers a melancholy reunion for Emiliano and surviving “Orangutanuns” Aurora and Antero. Catching up begins at the funeral and continues at a bar, where Emiliano, Aurora, and Antero realize Duke, who was well-known for his novels, has made a greater impact than any of them. Emiliano, now a freelance writer, is outraged when an editor suggests he write a quick biography of Duke, to “ride the coattails of his death.” Emiliano’s memories of Duke are painfully tied to Duke’s rejection of him, and Duke gained mileage in his literary career by making Emiliano a thinly disguised character in his fiction “at a time when sex between men was either invisible or merely hinted at in Brazilian literature and made the hippest of humanities students uncomfortable.” The infectious, rueful narration shows Emiliano’s uneasy attachment to his home city. Galera crafts a nuanced, complex portrait of millennial anxiety and anomie. Agent: Laurence Laluyaux, RCW Literary Agency. (Aug.)