Photo de l'auteur

Tore Renberg

Auteur de Mannen som elsket Yngve : roman

29+ oeuvres 764 utilisateurs 30 critiques 4 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Tore Renberg, n Tore Renberg

Crédit image: Photo: Dag Knudsen

Séries

Œuvres de Tore Renberg

Mannen som elsket Yngve : roman (2003) 231 exemplaires
Kompani Orheim : roman (2005) 153 exemplaires
Charlotte Isabel Hansen : roman (2008) 84 exemplaires
See You Tomorrow (2013) 68 exemplaires
Pixley Mapogo : roman (2009) 37 exemplaires
Tollak til Ingeborg (2020) 28 exemplaires
Angrep fra alle kanter : roman (2014) 28 exemplaires
Dette er mine gamle dager : roman (2011) 23 exemplaires
Du er så lys : roman (2016) 16 exemplaires
Skada gods : roman (2017) 12 exemplaires
Matriarkat : roman (1996) 8 exemplaires
Assalamu alaikum roman (2021) 6 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

A Priest's Diary (1987) — Medforf., quelques éditions13 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1972-08-03
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Norway
Lieux de résidence
Stavanger, Norway

Membres

Critiques

Denne romanen er på nynorsk. Og et nydelig nynorsk og. Slik at språket nærmer seg poesien samtidig som det er direkte og nakent. Han går rett på personene og beskriver dem slik de er. Både fysisk og psykisk. Men vi ser hovedpersonens syn på hvem og hva de er, og spørsmålet er da om han noen ganger tar feil?
 
Signalé
astridterese | Oct 7, 2021 |
Jag är så glad att den äntligen är slut.
 
Signalé
autisticluke | 7 autres critiques | Nov 14, 2019 |
Tore Renberg introduserer et helt nytt karakterunivers i Vi ses i morgen, fremdeles fra Stavanger. Men stort fjernere fra Jarle Klepp og hans intellektuelle verden er det vanskelig å komme. (Nå har vi møtte noen av karakterene før i langnovellene VIdeogutten og Farmor har kabel-TV, men dette er i en ny setting og ny tid). Rudi, Chessi og Jani er helstøpte komediekarakterer, hardbarkede banditter med hjerte, moral og retning, og de svært så troverdige ungdommene som utgjør den andre halvdelen av karakteruniverset er vel så interessante og vesentlige. Renberg lar karakterene fortelle historien fra sine ulike ståsteder og med sine ulike blikk, og vi blir fascinerte deltakere på en reise gjennom tre skjelsettende døgn, der forfatteren ikke spare på noe som helst krutt. Romanen er skrevet med sikkerhet og av en forfatter som kan sin dramaturgi, som fokuserer på leserens opplevelsen og som vet å bygge godt researchede miljøer. Dette er en roman med hjerte, som får latterdøren på vid gap, og likevel ikke byr på fjas. Sammen med Knausgård er Renberg Norges beste nålevende forfatter.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
petterw | 5 autres critiques | Nov 26, 2015 |
Make no mistake, Tore Renberg’s See You Tomorrow (Arcadia, 2014) is the hardest boiled of thrillers. Brash, gruesome, riveting, bitter and full on, it requires a courageous reader. It is, as you would expect of a thriller from the Arcadia stable, an action-packed page-turner. But it’s cleverer and more rewarding than that. It’s a terrifying insight into how people can become bound into a repellent, immoral and perverted code of behaviour which, for them, becomes justifiable, even something to be proud of, as the only means to survive in the a world which has done them no favours. What emerges is a questioning of the human condition, delivered without judgment, which is intelligent, engaging and ultimately troubling. Late night reading is not recommended.

The sun is shining on Stavanger and it’s hot. Unseasonably hot for late September. Sunlight burns a rare spotlight on the lives of eleven usually unnoticed misfits, left behind by Stavanger’s rapid, oil-funded gentrification. Among them are petty criminals with a philosophically flawed but pragmatic code of ethics, their lives ringed with heavy-metal and horror films, dishing out brutality in paltry revenge for that which they have received; teenager Sandra, blinded by faith in a God who doesn’t bless her and fatefully repressed by parental, middle-class expectations is infatuated with a bright-eyed and devastatingly handsome local delinquent who refuses to discuss his past; Pal, left behind more than once, is bewildered his own inability to live an ordinary and struggling to keep up appearances and single-handedly bring up his two girls. He’s also a secret and unsuccessful gambler who deals with his mounting debt by tipping bills into the litter bin at a nearby bus stop; Cecilie is awkward, abused and wonderfully powerful but she doesn’t know whose baby she is carrying. Rudi, always super-horny, whose Asperger’s-like tendencies compel him to over-value routine and under-value the ability to stop talking, proves much of the darkly comic humour: one might think of him as a lovable rogue, if he didn’t enjoy dishing out ritualistic violence quite so much. Jani, hilariously, haphazardly tries to use his own mangled version oil-rich corporate conglomerates’ management techniques to his dangerously pathetic local gang of four.

Over the course of three days their stories continually collide, causing explosions which propel them off course, all of them, scratching and scrambling to regain a small portion of control. There’s so much about the bonds that bind people and the casual cruelty that breaks them apart. Out of it comes a relentless narrative which will revolt the faint-hearted and reward thoughtful thrill-seekers.

Renberg has acknowledged William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying (1930) as an influence on See You Tomorrow. The parallels in style are obvious – interlaced narratives told from different perspectives; short, sharp chapters, constantly challenging the reader to keep up and work it out. But there is something deeply intimate about Renberg’s style – his benevolent interest in characters, his sympathy for their circumstances, all wrapped round with the sometimes comforting and sometimes confrontational sounds of music and poetry – that makes See You Tomorrow distinct. I never know where I am with Faulkner. Renberg gives signposts!

At one point, as I closed the book (I had to occasionally, just to catch my breath) it struck me that fellow thriller-seeker Liz Barnsley would love this book. I quick stop over at her blog, Liz Loves to Read, proved me right. She gave it “Five shiny ‘do not miss this book’ stars and an elephant”. I’m not sure about the elephant, but See You Tomorrow is certainly 550 pages of zestful verve for which the phrase page-turner might have been invented.

(A version of this review, complete with pictures and author notes, appears on my blog: https://bookaddictionuk.wordpress.com )
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
BookAddictUK | 5 autres critiques | Aug 11, 2015 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
29
Aussi par
1
Membres
764
Popularité
#33,305
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
30
ISBN
109
Langues
12
Favoris
4

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