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The Shadow of the Object

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'One of our boldest writers' Deborah Levy

A magnificent work of shadow-play and a meditation on desire, metamorphosis and mortality.


Flora is visiting home in Mexico when the family dog leaps up and bites her hand. She winds up in hospital where she undergoes several surgeries under anaesthesia and meets Wilhelmina, an elderly German woman with pneumonia, who collects pre-cinema toys and instruments. The two of them embark on a series of dream-like conversations in the hospital corridors. Wilhelmina puts on a magic lantern show for Flora, leaving her spellbound.

When things take an unexpected turn, Flora finds herself entrusted with an important mission. She returns to London, where she resumes her job polishing silver at a jewellery shop, and strikes up a strange friendship with Wilhelmina’s son, Max. As Flora dips in and out of her imagination, she is increasingly aware it’s not only the magic lantern that projects, and her perception of reality is subtly altered.

‘One of the most brilliant novelists working in English today’ Garth Greenwell

‘The politics of her prose is existential rather than anecdotal, as it was with Kafka’s’ Zadie Smith


‘A subtle and courageous writer’ Ali Smith

‘Chloe Aridjis is crafting a poetics of the strange’ TLS

Kindle Edition

Published April 16, 2026

9 people are currently reading
427 people want to read

About the author

Chloe Aridjis

26 books157 followers
Chloe Aridjis was born in New York and grew up in the Netherlands and Mexico City. After receiving a BA from Harvard, she went on to receive a PhD from Oxford University. A collection of essays on Magic and Poetry in Nineteenth-century France was released in 2005. Her first novel, Book of Clouds, followed in 2009, winning the Prix du Premier Roman Etranger in France.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Chris.
632 reviews191 followers
April 30, 2026
Beautifully written, intriguing novel about friendship and mortality that almost reads like a dream. Aridjis is able to elevate the everyday to something extraordinary and her play with light and shadow is absolutely wonderful. Recommended for readers of Deborah Levy and Aysegül Savas!
Profile Image for Ailsa.
235 reviews273 followers
April 18, 2026
"I sensed a hidden pact between everything, a density forced open for an instant." 133

I picked The Shadow of the Object up at the bookshop because I liked the cover and, unusually, I had seen zero pre-publication press for it.

A strange novel that is always on the cusp of dream-logic but remains within the bounds of reality. I liked it a lot.
Profile Image for Christopher Walthorne.
354 reviews19 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 22, 2026
Weird, offbeat and very original, this is an intriguing novel from an author working outside of the box. Would definitely recommend!
2 reviews
May 5, 2026
I feel like I just spent three days in a dream. Very unlike other contemporary fiction.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews