The Light Room
The Light Room
Kate Zambreno
From “one of our most formally ambitious writers” (Esquire), a moving account of art and caretaking in our precarious present.
The Light Room takes place over the course of cloistered seasons, between the rooms of an apartment and a city’s green spaces, amid the exhaustion and isolation of caring for a baby and a small child. In search of relief from a moment both monotonous and profoundly uncertain, Zambreno engages a lineage of other writers and artists who have made art from a daily practice—from Natalia Ginzburg to Joseph Cornell, Yūko Tsushima to Bernadette Mayer, Etel Adnan to David Wojnarowicz.
What does it mean to bring new life, and new work, into this world of precarity and crisis? How are our memories, and our children’s, affected by our profound disconnection? Zambreno’s most poetic, tender, and philosophical work yet, The Light Room represents an impassioned appreciation of community and the commons, and an ecstatic engagement with the living world.
Praise for Kate Zambreno:
“Kate Zambreno has invented a new form. It is a kind of absolute present, real life captured in closeup.”—Annie Ernaux, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
Praise for The light room:
"Elegant . . . This is a book about the aloneness of motherhood—the limits of maternal attention, the dissolution of self, the mind-numbing tedium of raising small children—[and] a book about a ‘life inside’—not just inside the home, but inside the mind. . . . It may be among the most lasting literature of Covid, a lightbox for the future: the story of a mother looking for brightness in a diary of dark days.”—New York Times Book Review
“With The Light Room, Zambreno—one of our most prolific and curious minds—chronicles what it’s like to be a mother amidst the various crises of this chaotic moment in history.”—Vulture
“Zambreno’s work reminds us that there is grace in going for a walk and feeling the energy of the seasons. There’s value in play and stillness and making art even when it feels like the world is on fire. . . . Zambreno’s project, from book to book, seems in part to be recording and celebrating those quiet moments, like the blossoms on a cherry tree, beautiful but ephemeral, or a child sounding out her first word. Those moments are fleeting, but their impact remains long after they have elapsed. . . . In the pages of The Light Room, they pay this miracle forward to us.” —Brian Gresko, Poets & Writers
“Despite the unfathomable distractions we're all facing, Zambreno writes with a sense of hope that will especially resonate with anyone who's soldiered through pandemic-era parenting.” —Harper's Bazaar
“[Zambreno’s] latest mode-warping work of memoir chronicles many of the writer’s own aching attempts at maternal insulation. . . . Its blessing lies not so much in any sunlight refuge as in the clarity and breadth of the view it provides: that being is at once shorter and longer and smaller and larger than we can ever hope to know.” —Ellie Eberlee, Chicago Review of Books
“Incandescent . . .The tension between crisis and joy resonated with me on a deep level as a parent, a writer, and a reader, as did the attention to the fine art of caretaking.” —Emily Raboteau, Orion
“Luminous . . . This book is a meditation on the practice of art and observation in the mundane. It’s about the beauty in maintenance, and it reached me at the right time . . . Zambreno has a facility with descriptions of the mundane, finding in them something marvelous and often funny.”—Niina Pollari
“The Light Room reminded me of that fundamental magic of writing—that the details of another person’s life, so precisely and honestly rendered, can instantly loosen the edges of your own life and make you feel less alone.”—Jenny Odell
“A gorgeous document of the tender and precise place where art and mothering necessarily meet. Natural and urban spaces float and glow under Kate Zambreno’s observant eye. Each leaf, each book, is a love letter activated by bohemian saints: the artists and writers who pass through their small rooms and far-reaching mind.”—Samantha Hunt
“The Light Room is a marvelous and marvel-filled book. Zambreno’s mind is like a magic filter discovering secrets when turned on any sort of item—a tiny toy, a loom, an artist, a mortality. A wonderful book, a companion for all the varieties of days.”—Rivka Galchen
Product Info
First Published: September 16, 2025
Nonfiction/Essay
5.25 x 8 | 256 pages
Rights: NA
9798893380194 (paperback)