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Chargement... Jag for ner till bror : roman (2018)par Karin Smirnoff
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. My thanks to the Author publisher's and NetGalley for providing me with a Kindle version of this book to read and honestly review. I am a big fan of Scandi Noir stories, and the blurb attached to this debut book made it a must read for me. However I must confess to some disappointment, maybe because of the hype I expected too much. Don't get me wrong it is beautifully written with superb characterisation throughout, and at no point was I bored, I just expected more, I kept waiting for a major shock or earth shattering surprise, that never materialised. Atmospheric bleak descriptive and disturbing, an intense tale of love pain and occasional violence. I am led to believe the Author will take over the mantle of writing the next book to feature one of my favourite characters Lisbeth Salander, I look forward to the outcome. Recommended.
Karin Smirnoffs (f. 1964) debutroman Jeg tog ned til bror beskriver med jordnær realisme og sort humor en udvikling, der også er aktuel i Danmark, nemlig tendensen til, at mænd bliver boende i udkantsområder, mens kvinderne flytter væk. I romanen er naturen og sundhedssystemet det kit, der får samfundet til at hænge sammen – men kun lige akkurat. Prix et récompenses
A literary noir of phenomenal power about the magnetic attraction of the wrong person, the brutality visited upon one human to another - and a rural community that stood by and did nothing. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)839.738Literature German and related languages Other Germanic literatures Swedish literature Swedish fiction 2000-ÉvaluationMoyenne:
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Which part of the story is not for telling?
Jana Kippo has returned to Smalånger to see her twin brother, Bror, still living in the small family farmhouse in the remote north of Sweden.
Within the isolated community, secrets and lies have grown silently, undisturbed for years.
Following the discovery of a young woman's body in the long grass behind the sawmill, the siblings, hooked by a childhood steeped in darkness, need to break free.
But the truth cannot be found in other people's stories. The question is: can it be found anywhere?
I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. THANK YOU.
My Review: First, read this:
You're now familiar with the author's voice in this, the first of three novels set it the Arctic Swedish town of Smalånger, where Bror and Jana are from...Jana has left...Bror hasn't bothered, he can drink himself to death in the comfort of what was the family's home. With, now, the company of his twin, as she chooses to come back to, to, help? Anyway, bear witness if not accelerate the crash. To keep herself in food (Bror worries about booze, nothing else) she starts working for the local social services department, which she calls smalångerhomecareservices, thus making herself useful while getting fully up on the local gossip from the people she works with and the ones she's helping to survive whatever time is left to them in a modicum of physical comfort. No one in Smalånger lives in psychic comfort, she discovers early, and often.
My idea of what I was in for was too weak-kneed. I thought I'd get something dark, but not my-eyes-my-poor-eyes dark! A woman suffers a dreadful childhood; returns to the scene of the crime to be there with the brother ("Bror" is Swedish for "brother"; unlike Jana, he has no personal name) whose life was stalled, stopped, and never had any particular reason to start it again. He drifts aimlessly, but reasonably harmlessly...yes, he sleeps with his best friend's wife, but it's not like he was the only one who did; he's drinking himself to death, sure, but when the woman he loved but who was murdered by person or persons unknown, what else is there to do except hang out with her widower and drink?
No, not chuckle one in this book. But there are two more in Swedish and I need to read them now!
What the heck? I need to read them? Yes, while I wouldn't have predicted that I'd get invested in this Nordic grimdark saga of terrible, sad, claustrophobic life in a tiny, remote, and dark (physically) place, that is exactly what happened. What more there is to learn I want to learn it.
It's that kind of a read, y'all. You won't leave the same as you entered. ( )