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La notte dell'incanto

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È un’afosa notte d’estate, e una luna quasi piena illumina una cittadina del Connecticut popolata di sogni e di sognatori. Il delizioso cast di personaggi che animano queste ore cariche di mistero e di promesse include tra l’altro un manichino che scappa dalla vetrina di un grande magazzino, una banda di ragazze adolescenti che si intrufolano nelle case altrui, rubano piccoli oggetti insignificanti e lasciano semplicemente foglietti che dicono “Siamo le vostre figlie”, un uomo ubriaco e solo che inciampa verso casa, uno scrittore frustrato di mezza età che mantiene il suo regolare appuntamento notturno con la madre di un amico d’infanzia, una giovane donna che incontra un amante fantasma sull’altalena nel retro di casa, tutte le bambole “in cui nessuno crede più”, lasciate abbandonate in soffitta, che magicamente prendono vita. A punteggiare le loro storie ci sono cori di voci notturne, suoni di insetti e un pifferaio che chiama i bambini dai loro letti.

144 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Steven Millhauser

67 books472 followers
Millhauser was born in New York City, grew up in Connecticut, and earned a B.A. from Columbia University in 1965. He then pursued a doctorate in English at Brown University. He never completed his dissertation but wrote parts of Edwin Mullhouse and From the Realm of Morpheus in two separate stays at Brown. Between times at the university, he wrote Portrait of a Romantic at his parents' house in Connecticut. His story "The Invention of Robert Herendeen" (in The Barnum Museum) features a failed student who has moved back in with his parents; the story is loosely based on this period of Millhauser's life.

Until the Pulitzer Prize, Millhauser was best known for his 1972 debut novel, Edwin Mullhouse. This novel, about a precocious writer whose career ends abruptly with his death at age eleven, features the fictional Jeffrey Cartwright playing Boswell to Edwin's Johnson. Edwin Mullhouse brought critical acclaim, and Millhauser followed with a second novel, Portrait of a Romantic, in 1977, and his first collection of short stories, In The Penny Arcade, in 1986.

Possibly the most well-known of his short stories is "Eisenheim the Illusionist" (published in "The Barnum Museum"), based on a pseudo-mythical tale of a magician who stunned audiences in Vienna in the latter part of the 19th century. It was made into the film, The Illusionist (2006).

Millhauser's stories often treat fantasy themes in a manner reminiscent of Poe or Borges, with a distinctively American voice. As critic Russell Potter has noted, "in (Millhauser's stories), mechanical cowboys at penny arcades come to life; curious amusement parks, museums, or catacombs beckon with secret passageways and walking automata; dreamers dream and children fly out their windows at night on magic carpets."

Millhauser's collections of stories continued with The Barnum Museum (1990), Little Kingdoms (1993), and The Knife Thrower and Other Stories (1998). The unexpected success of Martin Dressler in 1997 brought Millhauser increased attention. Dangerous Laughter: Thirteen Stories made the New York Times Book Review list of "10 Best Books of 2008".

Millhauser lives in Saratoga Springs, New York and teaches at Skidmore College.

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5 stars
241 (23%)
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332 (31%)
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317 (30%)
2 stars
110 (10%)
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38 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 149 reviews
Profile Image for Mir.
4,974 reviews5,332 followers
January 26, 2015

This was published a while ago, but still Millhauser was older than most of the characters he creates, and it shows in the point of view, particularly in regards to all the young women. They think like old women gazing back nostalgically at the wilder days, more romantic nights of their youths (and forgetting the angst and heartbreak that accompanied them).
Oh god, she's having wild thoughts, dream thoughts under the summer moon . She can feel the night working through her, she is a daughter of the night and the moon and her hair is streaming in the branches of the trees and her breath is the night sky.

I am not as young as Janet, but closer than the author is, and I can tell you no one thinks like this when they are twenty and making out with a hot guy in a thicket. Likewise I don't think most teen boys sit around thinking abstractly about how they would feel grateful and deeply moved if any girl let them have a feel.

Perhaps the his tone of elderly backward-looking is deliberate and I am missing the point of why it is employed, but it contrasts oddly with the sense of immediacy that the descriptions otherwise arouse, the restless young people and the dissatisfied loners (loners are all dissatisfied and lacking here, there is no possibility that one might be happy alone) wandering out into the night looking for -- what? Called by something, the moon stirring their blood, the panpipes which only the children hear.

I thought that was one of the weakest sections, by the way, the kids all at once going out to play in the dark and meeting Pan. It was so brief, nothing was done with it, even less than the moving toys section. And the mannequin... In fact, I think the book might have been better without any of the whimsical supernatural elements. The pervs and drunks and eccentric old ladies felt a lot more real than Columbine and that fucking twee unloved teddy bear.

However, I did in many places think the prose was very fine, especially when Millhauser is not trying to talk from anyone's point of view. He definitely has a strong rhythmic quality. My favorite sections were the recurring Chorus of Night Voices, which are strongly allusive of classical literature.
Hail, goddess, bright one, shining one: release him from confusion. Lighten his burden, banish his darkness: teach the sleeping heart to wake. Hail, goddess, night-enchantress: show the lost one the way.

I might try Millhauser again. I might not. I'm not very interested in reading fiction without characters. Anyone have a recommendation of a book of his that has character development?
Profile Image for Frederic S..
Author 17 books123 followers
January 19, 2012
This is one of the great ones. It's on my small shelf of favorite books, and it's one I recommend to friends at every opportunity. I first discovered it in Tokyo's Kinokuniya Bookstore when it must have been newly-released. There it was -- that beautiful cover that draws you in and makes you at once curious and nostalgic. I've never seen a cover better-suited to the content of the book it embraces. Here, before our eyes, is a summer night in all its haunting mystery and swift-fleeting magic. All too soon the moon will set; but before it does, here are the dark corners of a town, here are the intersecting lines of human lives, all waiting to be explored. Millhauser is a virtuoso of language and style. I want to be him when I grow up. I have some pens that write with a shimmery, silvery, light-blue ink; on the deep midnight blue of the inside cover, I inscribed with one the time and place I began and finished the book. I have two rituals connected with it: one, I have only ever read it during the hottest season of the year. I would suggest reading it in late July or early August (unless you live in the Southern Hemisphere). Two, it MUST be read in the dark hours, preferably when the moon rides the sky. If I were to read this book by the light of the sun, I honestly think it might disintegrate. That's what a thing of enchantment and mystery it is. So, yes -- this one comes with my highest recommendation. It's one you won't forget. It's one you'll want to revisit summer after summer, because there's no end to its wistfulness and beauty.
Profile Image for Jeremiah Seyrak.
Author 2 books20 followers
August 17, 2019
As a novella, it is quite good to see how he brings to life some interesting characters in such a small space.
Profile Image for Virginia Aikens.
135 reviews1 follower
June 28, 2016
I make an attempt to read this book at least once every summer. I look for a clear night with a full moon, and if possible sit outside to read.

This book is filled to the brim with beautiful, eerie imagery, and the flow and tone of Millhauser's prose leaves me joyful, sad, creeped out, and quietly happy every time I read it. Fantastic word pictures that often feel like poetry. I highly recommend this to anyone who enjoys vivid imagery and bittersweet nostalgia. It will make you long for a past that you may (or may not) have experienced.
Profile Image for Alan.
Author 15 books191 followers
February 9, 2012
review coming (I hope, time short)...

suitably dreamy and poetic, the choruses giving it music and rhythm, all the citizens are touched by magic, the manikin that comes alive for one bloke; another has a phantom lover. Gentle: there isn’t any evil here – mischief yes, the girls who burgle silently and re-arrange the furniture rather than steal, the boys who break into the library, the man who stalks the woman/is a voyeur..

..all murmur in your ear and the whole becomes thoroughly delightful, light and beautiful. Did I miss the gutsy forces of bad, a bit of conflict? No,a dimension missing but not missed.

I thought of course of Midsummer Night’s Dream; of a lighter and dreamier Winnesburg Ohio (in that it features people from the same town I suppose, and the small chapters).
Profile Image for Pablo Hernandez.
104 reviews69 followers
September 7, 2025
Steven Millhauser seldom disappoints; to me, he is one of the short story masters, and reading his books is always a pleasure.

Here, through a series of interconnected vignettes taking place in a lone summer night, with the moon acting as all-seeing, ever-present figure, Millhauser delves into the whimsical and fantastic without forgetting the humanity of his characters. It is a night of unraveling and discovery, a night of secrets and awakenings, the ideal backdrop for the author’s trademark magical realism style.

This is very much a ‘vibe’ sort of book, as there is no conflict or real plot to speak of (this is not a negative at all, in this case), and it felt most appropriate to start reading it on a late summer night.

Profile Image for Tim.
561 reviews26 followers
March 28, 2017
I have encountered pieces by this writer that I liked, but this was not one of them, sorry to say. I listened to an audio version read by Stefan Rudnicki, that had some appropriate musical accompaniment. In this dreamy novella, we encounter a number of characters who wander the streets of a Connecticut town on a moonlit summer night. The mysterious feeling of such nights is captured well in the prose, but there is not much of a story line, and the characters range from being fairly interesting to being virtually non-existent, or not even human, as in the case of the mannequins who do a little moving around. There are two lonely regular joes (Haverstraw and Coop), and I couldn't help wonder why there were two such similar characters hanging around, but not interacting with each other. One manly guy does some boasting to his buddy about encounters with women and the like. There is a group of teenage girls who slip into houses and rearrange things and leave little notes - they have cute names like Summer Storm and Fast Lane. There are a couple of romantic encounters with phantom/imaginary lovers, but none that involve real people. A tired, uninspiring sexuality is frequently present. It all seems kind of pointless, unless Millhauser's point was that there is a solitude that lurks in those mysterious summer nights.
Profile Image for Brendan Ford.
32 reviews3 followers
May 27, 2024
Read this five years ago now, but I still find myself thinking of it often. My favorite kind of book. The one you think you're done with but isn't quite done with you.

Edit: Another reread. Millhauser is an acquired taste, but I love his writing, his stories. The wistfulness, the nostalgia, the neverending iterating on ideas and themes.
75 reviews
September 4, 2024
An absolute dream - fitting that I finished this book at 1:40 AM with the windows open, listening to the chorus of the crickets and watching the last vestiges of August slip away. The magic of summer nights, the liminal space and endless possibilities as the real world fades; it's all captured here. I want to start the tradition of reading this each summer. It's meant to be savored, sipped languidly and indulged in. It's the fantastical nature of childhood, carried on into an adult world. Read this when you're reflective, calm, not aching or desperate for something with teeth.

I wish I could be in the stars, just as Laura wishes to be in the moon. So much of the scenery reminded me of the little college town I grew up in, nestled among the rural fields and forests of Ohio. It all seemed like a possible portrait of my neighbors and me, savoring the balmy midnight or contemplating our hurts in the darkness. I think of being a child and the vivid memories of fireflies calling to me at night, the twinkle of soft summer stars against an inky sky. Maybe there's a satyr in the woods here too, playing his reed and calling to the awe-filled children. I want to escape the bonds of earth and the weight of day.

This, and Dandelion Wine, are two volumes that most perfectly capture the nostalgia of childhood and the bittersweet awareness that comes with maturing and saying goodbye. It also reminds me of Wink Poppy Midnight and Goodnight, Moon - the same enrapture that steals the words from your lips and leaves you entranced. Memory does turn into imagination, and perhaps that's okay. Maybe ways in which we fill in the gaps have a kind of inner authenticity.

The sensuality and sex turn into something natural and dreamlike too. It blends into the night memory without bursting the mirage. The supernatural and impossible, too, are accepted at face value, just one more facet of a moondrenched voyage. I want the Moon Goddess to caress me too.

We have just one world, but we live in different ones - I think about this all the time, and I think Millhauser's writing demonstrated this so vividly. It's a calm book, stirring but not sharp. A perfect way to end my summer as I head back to uni for the fall.
Profile Image for Amy (Other Amy).
481 reviews100 followers
December 5, 2021
The lovers and loners are therefore very much aware of each other, but it is difficult to know what they are thinking. Are the lovers grateful to the loners for making them feel fortunate? Do they perhaps envy the loners their night freedom, far from the demands and desires of another creature? As for the loners, it’s easy to imagine that they are irritated by the lovers, who remind them of their loneliness, and who invade the beach as if to take over the last preserve of the solitary wanderer. It’s possible of course that the loners, for reasons obscure to them, have come to the beach precisely because they know that the lovers will be here, on this warm summer night.


This loner would mostly like the lovers to consider that not every damn thing is about love or sex or both, or, failing that, to kindly shut up. I'm probably cranky though. Here lately I'm not having the best time revisiting authors whose work I loved the first time around. (And I absolutely did love The Knife Thrower and Other Stories.) That said, I freely admit that if Mr. Millhauser had cut out half the plotlines in the book (specifically the ones about young people) and had just focused only on his older characters, this would have been a five star read easy. OR if he had let the Moon . I don't know. Like I said, I am cranky. This missed the mark with me rather badly, is all.
Profile Image for Alexander Kodak.
36 reviews
November 15, 2023
This book was absolutely terrible. It’s the worst book I’ve ever read. The only joy I had in reading this book, was trashing it and waiting to come here and call it a terrible book.

The author tries SOOOOO hard to make symbols and motifs weaved into the short stories, but the absolutely are overused to the point of ever being able to form a meaning. Seriously you cannot go 1 page without the mention of the moon/moonlight. There was a page that mentioned the moonlight SIX TIMES. Are there no other ways to show imagery of a night lit scene???

Other flop symbols: leaves, the color green, maples, street lamps, windows, attics, shadows, parking lots, dark blue sky, backyards, lawns. The book is over saturated with these and it makes it unbearable to read.

If you made a drinking game out of the symbols, you’d require hospitalization just 10 pages in (probably earlier).
Profile Image for Jordan.
51 reviews
June 29, 2022
This would be whimsical and dreamy if it weren’t for the creepy caricatures of young girls
Profile Image for R..
1,021 reviews143 followers
June 18, 2015
Do summer nights like this still exist? I'd like to think they do, for some people, somewhere, under certain circumstances. Magic moonlit nights, where you become nothing more than a gallivanting shadow on the periphery of another night-wanderer's vision, your thoughts of your past animated into a walking and talking supporting character in its own right, a manmade Memorex-man called into being, a golem scooped (ice cream scoops) together from the clay of dreams (clay from Morpheus' own riverbed) that gallivants equally grumpy and glad on the periphery of your vision.

Nights where you bump into people. Where people are the things that go bump in the night. Or not. Nights where the moonlit shadows of trees are the spontaneously generated architecture of a private temple, where you can get away from it all, get away from everybody, get away from yourself and wear a mask made of holepunched leaves. Everyone deserves to be a forgotten god of nature cavorting in the shadows, on the periphery, now and then, or at least once or twice in their lifetimes.

I think those kinds of summer nights, where everyone is awake and lost in thought and memory, or making adventures, small adventures, yes, but adventures all the same, are rare, now. Nowdays, if a body can't sleep, she can just binge-watch a cooking show or scroll through the internet until dawn. Go outside? Dangerous this time of night! Undress in the woods? Not only asking for trouble, but praying for it!

This novella often errs on the side of song rather than sense, the occasional "fuck" and "cunt" rips you violently right out of the enchantment, and Millhauser seems to take a Nabokovian delight in the bodies of young women but, still, this book works its charms and will undoubtedly reap rewards with repeated readings. It's a time capsule that encapsulates a time not so much lost to technology but abandoned out of fear. Fear of the American night (our pioneer blood, our immigrant blood, has been diluted), fear of other people in the night (unless they're online and anonymous and far, far away), fear of getting caught (or not getting caught, not being seen being adventurous, so why bother?)

All this fear, all this fear shit, it has taken its toll.

So?

So take back the night.
Profile Image for Jeremy.
88 reviews5 followers
January 18, 2010
A friend of mine recently asked me, "What is experimental fiction?" and I had to admit I had no coherent conception of it.

I could've been a Kerouac-type jackoff, and said that, "Man, every time we sit down in front of our blank pages and fill them with our dreams of the self and the world and...pfffffffft, yatta...we're engaging in ann experiment," but while that's not precisely untrue, it's still bullshit.

Anyway, maybe this Millhauser fellow is engaging in a form of experimental fiction.

The book is a collection of very brief vignettes, floridly rendered to the point where I want to call them prose-poems, but am not irritated. The vignettes are loosely knotted into a set of separate plots, all of which resolve coherently.

But everything that happens (mannequin comes to life; faun entices children to the woods with his flute; the moon goddess descends upon and makes love to a sleeping adolescent; a charming "gang" of masked teenage girls keep company with a woman on the brink of solitude-madness; etc) seems of a piece with a reliably collective consciousness. And it's written in such a way that one never finds himself at a loss as to what's happening and why.

Profile Image for Morgan Chavez.
195 reviews1 follower
April 23, 2023
I'll say 2.5 because I didn't hate it and there were some parts that were nice to read but mostly it kind of fell flat. I kind of feel like millhauser read a midsummer nights dream and said "let me try that" but the modern-day, real-life elements kind of diluted the idea. The concept of the book was so intriguing to me because I loved the idea of like a moonlit summer night's fever dream come to life, but the only story that I felt portrayed that properly was the one with the lovers in the spruces. Like the idea that daylight might steal whatever happens in the night from reality and trying to savor it. I get that. This also felt oddly sexually charged when it didn't need to be at times and soooo hyperfixated on moonlight (which again, I like the sentiment of that but it was too overt, like more subtlety would be nice) anyway! I like the inquiry into what happens when the world sleeps and the dreamers walk the streets, but I think it could've had better delivery.
Profile Image for Vincent Desjardins.
325 reviews29 followers
January 25, 2010
Millhauser has a way of drawing a reader into his stories by turning the details of everyday life into something extraordinary. In this bewitching novella he suffuses his cast of wanderers, loners, lovers and dreamers with the radiant light of the moon. On a warm summer night, etched in moonlight, lovers are united, loners are befriended, dolls are awakened, children are entranced and mischief makers are surprised All are caressed and in someway transformed by the magical glow of the moon. It is a night of passions played out and of remarkable awakenings. A wonderful and poetic fairy tale for grown-ups.
Profile Image for Chazzbot.
255 reviews38 followers
February 12, 2011
Millhauser's novella is highly reminiscent of Ray Bradbury's work, particularly "Dandelion Wine." This story reads like a version of Bradbury for adults, or for the adult versions of Bradbury's characters. Millhauser also evokes epic poetry, particularly in the fantasy sequences involving the Moon Goddess: "Heart-stirred she rests, the goddess sharp-wounded." The novella serves as an American story of magic realism, and the brief chapters reward multiple readings, particularly as the titular evening progresses. This is an engaging work of modern adult fantasy.
Profile Image for La testa fra i libri.
758 reviews29 followers
April 4, 2022
Uno dei miei ricordi preferiti dell’infanzia è il momento di andare a letto. Mia madre ci accompagnava cantando Quando è l’ora di fare la nanna e, se io e miei fratelli non eravamo ancora nel mondo dei sogni, ci raccontava le incredibili storie dell’omino piccino picciò. Mio padre, invece, ci leggeva il libro Cuore. Quando sono diventata mamma non mancava una sera che non leggessi una storia a mio figlio e, sinceramente, ora che è grande mi mancano quei momenti.

Leggendo La notte dell’incanto ho avuto la sensazione di tornare indietro nel tempo e, qui di seguito, vi elenco i cinque motivi per leggere questo libro per voi stessi o a qualcuno.

1° motivo: lo stile narrativo. Il tipo di narrazione di Steven Millhauser è da fiaba e spesso mi sono immaginata a leggere diverse storie presenti nel libro, come se le stessi leggendo ad alta voce a mio figlio. La fluidità del testo è data dall’uso intelligente delle parole che ampliano un concetto e dal riconoscibile collegamento che lega i diversi personaggi delle storie. Le stesse ruotano tutte attorno a una piccola cittadina del Connecticut, alcune sono molto brevi mentre altre no, ci sono personaggi più misteriosi rispetto ad altri e la notte coccola tutto quanto.

2° motivo: il confine fra reale e fantasia. Ci sono storie talmente incredibili che rompono il confine che divide fra il reale e la fantasia. Sembra quasi di vivere un sogno e, secondo quanto dichiarato dall’autore, l’intenzione di scrivere qualcosa come Sogno di una notte di mezza estate, credo che sia ben riuscito.

3° motivo: la consapevolezza. C’è una sorta di consapevolezza che aumenta durante la lettura e mi ha fatto prendere coscienza che, in ogni caso, ognuno di noi fa parte di un tutto più grande.

4° motivo: le figure retoriche. L’autore utilizza artifici del discorso per creare un effetto narrativo che spesso e volentieri incanta e, alcune volte, ho avuto la percezione che diventasse anche evocativo.

5° motivo: qualcosa di diverso. Le storie narrate da Steven Millhauser non sono le solite né tanto meno prevedibili. C’è una forma narrativa che a volte è come se buttasse l’amo lasciando libero spazio alla fantasia di chi la legge, mentre in altre prende per mano.
Profile Image for Ian.
136 reviews17 followers
February 25, 2025
This is a quirky book. It’s painted almost entirely in vignettes. The short chapters are essentially just individual tableaux, quick moments like dreams in the night. A novella set over the course of a single night, Enchanted Night asks what happens when a sleepy Connecticut town is revived by the moonlight, and what mischief the denizens get up to while the stars shine.

Don’t read this book literally; loosen the screws of your brain and give in to the mystical. The long-forgotten dolls in the attic wake, the store mannequins dance in the streets, young boys fall in love, and young girls form a chain gang. It’s a very short book, but it does whip you up into a bit of a low-burning frenzy.

Millhauser keeps it all contained with simple writing. He doesn’t veer into the fantastical; he writes with a straightforward sense of realism. The mindset is that this is all really happening—of course it is. It would be silly to think otherwise.

But amongst all the magical realism, there are some lovely human stories: boys spying on a moon-bathing young woman; young lovers kissing in the backyard to the chagrin of their prudish neighbour. There’s a melancholic tenderness to it all that is quite enchanting.
Profile Image for Colin.
128 reviews3 followers
December 27, 2025
One of my exercises is to give myself a break from reading a book I’m struggling with by plunging headlong into a thin thrift store find, hoping for a little relief. It’s a jinx that can occasionally lead to engrossment and that rare vacuum inhalation read. Like the pleasure of circumstantial motel cable tv movies. This was a fruitless day at such an exercise. But this neurotic tradition will continue, goddamnit, and I will seed the little free libraries of my city with boring novellas for years to come
Profile Image for gałganzbagien.
704 reviews
April 11, 2023
3,5 ⭐

Przeczytane to zostało z dwóch powodów:
1. Pojawiło się w zapowiedzi do comebacku Billlie (stan them for clean skin + qEnchanted Night to bop).
2. Okładka >>>

Ogólnie to mi się podobało, ale ten realizm magiczny chyba mnie za bardzo przygniótł. Dodatkowo czytałam po angielsku, bo tej książki na polski nie przełożył nikt i już raczej nie przełoży.

Jest naprawdę osobliwa, ale dosyć prosta w zamyśle. Także ten... Polecam i nie polecam jednocześnie.
Profile Image for Spencer Fancutt.
254 reviews8 followers
January 26, 2018
A whispered set-piece of moonlit magic. Anything can happen when the daylight suburban residents are taken over by the power of a balmy, fantastical night, letting desire and longing take as many forms as midnight shadows thrown.
Profile Image for Laura.
96 reviews
April 9, 2022
Molto delicato e poetico. Direi onirico.
Vari personaggi uniti da un unico filo conduttore: la luna piena di una notte d'estate.
Profile Image for Aaron.
621 reviews4 followers
August 1, 2023
The word "moon" is used no less than 500 times in this 100 page novella and that seems excessive.
Profile Image for Glen Schroeder.
61 reviews1 follower
March 14, 2023
"Come out, come out, wherever you are, you dreamers and drowners, you loafers and losers, you shadow-seekers and orphans of the sun. Come out, come out, you flops and fizzlers, you good-for-nothings and you down-and-outers, day's outcasts, dark's little darlin's. Come on, all you who are misbegotten and woebegone, all you with black thoughts and red fever-visions, come on, you small-town Ishmaels with your sad blue eyes, you plain Janes and hard-luck guys, come, you gripers and groaners, you goners and loners, you sad-sacks and shlemiels, come on, come on, you pale romantics and pie-eyed Palookas, you has-beens and never-will-bes, you sun-mocked and day-doomed denizens of the dark: come out into the night."
Author 9 books3 followers
August 21, 2024
'That summer feeling's gonna haunt you the rest of your life.' Jonathan Richman
It's captured beautifully here in shimmering moonlit language and colorful vignettes in which the animate dance with the inanimate, the mundane with the magical, on a night out of time.
Profile Image for Scott W..
14 reviews1 follower
April 4, 2021
I've taught this book and read it for pleasure, multiple times. It's short, not a novella as much as a set of vignettes that sometimes act as prose poems or, in a few cases, as poems. One night in an unnamed and hard-t0-locate American town: could be midwestern, or western, or eastern, though it didn't feel southern, I'll say that. Kids sneak out of upper-floor bedrooms to rendezvous with lovers; mannequins come to life; a gang of girls breaks into homes simply to sit and occupy them for a bit; a backyard swing becomes a (figurative) portal to another world; etc. The moon is full and exerts a powerful influence.

At a basic level, this is like a novel made of a set of Millhauserian short stories--as if the self-contained worlds of the stories in The Knife Thrower or Dangerous Laughter had all come together in one place and time. (Indeed, many of the plots/themes/characters in Enchanted Night hew very closely to those in Millhauser's other works.) But the whole thing is a little more gauzy, more benign (mostly), more magical than the rest of Millhauser's oeuvre. The closest analogue I can think of is Ray Bradbury, especially Dandelion Wine, though that book is a full degree more elegiac, more bittersweet, more backwards-looking. To love Enchanted Night, I think that you have to be a sucker for this kind of situation--out at night, in summer, in a place that is otherwise safe, the light playing tricks, the world quiet, the windows dark but a few night owls. As I am a sucker for that kind of situation, I am in the tank for this amazing book.
Profile Image for john callahan.
140 reviews11 followers
January 16, 2024
I read this book probably 20 or more years ago. While talking with a friend last week I was reminded of it and told her about it. I bought a copy to mail to her and decided to get one for myself.

The book is made up of many 1-3 page "chapterlets" that describe the activities of several people and other animate objects over the course of one summer night. It is a night when the moon is almost full, and it is the moon goddess that inspires the enchantment of this night. Many uncanny things occur: dolls in an attic come to life, a faun's panpipe is heard throughout the town, and some humans do things they would not ever do otherwise. For example, a young woman is enchanted by the moon, undresses and lies down in a grove of trees in order to bathe herself in the light of the moon.

Every so often a chapterlet is devoted to a "Chorus of Night Voices."

The events described in the book (described by the author as a novella, are strange enough to be delightfully surprising, And I was delighted to follow the actions of the characters, all of whom receive a respite from their loneliness..

The prose is beautiful, and I wanted to read some passages aloud to myself because of their rhythm. But the prose is not difficult to read or understand.

The author has written two full-length novels and several collections of short stories. I have read a few of the story collections, and would recommend them and especially this novella to all readers.

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