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A Feather on the Breath of God book cover

A Feather on the Breath of God

by Sigrid Nunez

Literary Fiction
Coming-of-Age
Memoir-Like
192 Pages

"Nunez's prose is luminous and haunting—she captures the loneliness of growing up between worlds with exquisite precision."

Synopsis

From Sigrid Nunez, the National Book Award-winning author of The Friend, comes a mesmerizing exploration of the tangled relationships between parents and children, between language and love, and between cultures and identity. A young woman reflects on her childhood in a 1950s and 1960s housing project, caught between the worlds of her Chinese-Panamanian father and her German mother. Her father is silent and withdrawn, carrying stories he never fully shares. Her mother is yearning and homesick, longing for a homeland that feels increasingly distant. The young woman escapes into dreams shaped by fragments of her parents' histories, by the books she devours, and by the otherworldly discipline of ballet. These elements—a homesick mother, a silent father, the transcendent world of dance—become the forces that shape not only her imagination but her very sense of self and sexuality. In spare, luminous prose, Nunez examines what it means to grow up between languages, between silences, between the stories told and the stories withheld. A Feather on the Breath of God is an intimate portrait of identity formed in the spaces between cultures, a meditation on inheritance and belonging that resonates with quiet power.

Our Take

A Feather on the Breath of God showcases Sigrid Nunez's singular gift for excavating profound emotional truths through deceptively simple prose. This slim novel reads almost like memoir, blurring the line between fiction and autobiography in a way that makes the narrative feel both intimate and universal. Nunez captures the particular loneliness of being a child of immigrants—not quite belonging to either your parents' worlds or to the American culture around you. The silence of the father and the nostalgia of the mother create an absence the narrator tries to fill through reading, dance, and imagination. What could feel fragmentary instead becomes a mosaic of memory and longing, with each piece revealing something essential about identity formation. Nunez's prose is spare yet luminous, never indulgent but deeply affecting. The book's brevity belies its emotional weight—every sentence carries significance. Readers who appreciated The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston or Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill will find a kindred spirit here. This early work from Nunez demonstrates the qualities that would later earn her the National Book Award: intelligence, emotional precision, and a willingness to explore the uncomfortable spaces between belonging and alienation. Essential reading for anyone interested in immigrant narratives and identity.