Showing posts with label sweden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sweden. Show all posts

Thursday, December 28, 2023


 

An Elderly Lady is Up to No Good, Tursten | 173 pages

    It's like a murder mystery, with no mystery... just Maud. Translated from the Swedish, this collection of short stories stars 88yo Maud who lives rent-free in a posh apartment in Gothensburg when she isn't traveling the world.
    I'll be honest, I could hardly put it down, but I'm not entirely sure I liked it! Tursten has a very dry, very dark sense of humor. I'm reminded of Fredrik Bachman's "Your Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She's Sorry," also translated from Swedish. 

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Bachman




A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Bachman-337 pages


I was not sure if I could warm up to Ove..he is such a curmudgeon.  It seems to take an extremely long time for the author to actually bring out why he is so despondent.  But then it turned into a feel good story.  Through many mishaps, yelling and finger pointing, a group of neighbors break through his crusty exterior and finally reach his heart.  I enjoyed it and look forward to Tom Hanks playing Ove.



Saturday, January 29, 2022

Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings by Neil Price

 Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings by Neil Price-656 pages

This is a sweeping look at the Vikings and the Viking Age (roughly 750-1050). I have seen Vikings on screen (Vikings on History Channel, in Assassin's Creed: Valhalla the video game, and other places) and I am very interested in learning more about the "real" Vikings and how they lived. I was not disappointed with this book. It is a good, fairly easy read. Vikings did not live glorious lives nor should they be glorified or celebrated. In many ways, Vikings were a very brutal people and Price compares them aptly to pirates (especially those who operated in the Caribbean in the 17th and 18th Centuries). Vikings owned and sold slaves and a goal of many raids was to capture slaves to be sold. Slaves were called thralls at this time and were treated very poorly. Thralls had no real rights or freedom and had little recourse to attain freedom. Many thralls were even sacrificed, sometimes to be buried with their owners when they died. Viking burials are explored in great detail in a chapter and an elaborate boat/ship burial is explained. A Viking male who was almost assuredly of some prominence was buried with several different animals who had been sacrificed and butchered (which was apparently common practice, according to the author). Furthermore (and more brutal, disturbing), a female thrall volunteered herself to be sacrificed and buried with him. According to Price, the female thrall was thence repeatedly raped by males of the community before being ritually butchered and buried with her owner. It paints a pretty picture, right! Price also explores the religion of the Vikings. He explains that they didn't have any real organized religion but they did have somewhat of a relationship with the gods (Thor, Odin, Freyya, Freyr, etc.). They did sacrifice and pray to one or more of the gods at times and they did believe in an afterlife, although not necessarily in the since of heaven and hell/good and bad. Price discusses much of the politics and everyday life of Vikings. For a while, they didn't have unified countries with rulers, but they operated more in war bands and communities. What I found most fascinating in this book, though, was Price's discussion of the raids and battles that took place throughout the Viking Age. The raids started as isolated events, but became much more coordinated as the Viking Age continued. The Vikings held much of England more than once with the longest period being during the Danelaw. They left their imprint on much of Europe and even into North America, the Middle East, and Russia. By the end of the Viking Age, they had raided and/or explored/colonized Frankia, England, Ireland, Scotland, Vinland, Iceland, Egypt, Spain, and Greenland among potentially others. Some of their coordinated attacks may have included hundreds of Viking longships and thousands of warriors. It wasn't really until the 11th Century that Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, and Iceland started to become more unified and kings tried to unite and rule. This somewhat coincided with the influx of Christianity to Scandinavia. I was fascinated by reading this sweeping history on the Vikings and I have a better grasp on how they lived and their psychology. 


Thursday, August 29, 2019

Irene Huss Detective Series by Helene Tursten

5) The Golden Calf by Helene Tursten, 340 pages

6) The Fire Dance by Helene Tursten, 336 pages

7) The Beige Man by Helene Tursten, 320 pages

I continue to enjoy these solid police procedurals set in Goteberg, Sweden that feature Detective Inspector Irene Huss.  I enjoy learning about another culture and how the legal process works there.  Sweden has a 25 year statute of limitations on murder, who knew?

If you enjoy Dateline mysteries and Law and Order these are the books for you!  I've got #8 in bag about half read right now.

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Detective Irene Huss Series by Helen Tursten

1) Detective Inspector Huss - 400 pages

2) The Torso - 368 pages

3) The Glass Devil - 338 pages

4) Night Rounds - 336 pages

This police procedural series follows Detective Inspector Irene Huss as she works cases for the Goteborg, Sweden police department.  Fans of Law and Order will find much to like here with following a case riding along with the police from inception through being solved.  I like learning about new cultures by reading mysteries in other parts of the world.  Finding out how their legal system differs from the US is often fascinating. 

The first book in the series is a little clunky but it seemed to be a translation issue that was fixed with the later volumes.  I've got four more in the series waiting on my to be read pile. 


Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began (Maus, #2) by Art Spiegelman

  by Art Spiegelman-136 pages

In this second and final graphic novel in the series, Art Spiegelman finishes telling his father's Holocaust story. It is both harrowing and hopeful. The detail in which the Holocaust is described is heartbreaking and the Nazi atrocities described cause anger to rise in one. This series is a great read on one man's experience (which was probably similar to many other survivors' experiences) before and during the Holocaust. Overall, I am glad to have read these two books. 

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

An Age of License: A Travelogue by Lucy Knisley

An Age of License: A Travelogue by Lucy Knisley-195 pages

Since this month's theme is travel, I decided to read some highly acclaimed graphic travelogues and this is one that was recommended. Lucy (the author) travels to Norway, Sweden, Germany, and France in September, 2011 and documents her travels in this graphic volume. Lucy is an acclaimed cartoonist/graphic novelist/artist who is invited to Raptus Comics Fest in Bergen, Norway which is the original reason for her travels, but she decides to visit friends/lovers in the other countries she travels to. It is an interesting, easy read and I would really like to take a trip like this someday.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson

The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson,  818 pages

The third book in the The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo series (which I thought would be the final book) was a very slow and tedious read for me.  I did not care for this final book that follows Lisbeth Salander as she recovers in the hospital and faces trial for the murder of three people.  Aided by reporter Mikael Blomkvist, Lisbeth is entangled in a plot to find out who is behind the corruption and criminal activity in the government institutions that are trying so hard to put her away.  With many names, characters, and organizations to keep track of, I did not find the book exciting until the end when Lisbeth is made to face the person who wishes her the most harm.

Monday, April 27, 2015

The Farm by Rob Smith

The Farm by Tom Rob Smith - 352 pages

Daniel's mother who has retired to Sweden with his father, suddenly and unexpectedly shows up at his apartment in London frantic, disheveled, and with quite a long, rambling mysterious story to tell him involving a missing person and a conspiracy to get her committed to a mental hospital. Meanwhile, his father calls from Sweden to explain that his mother, Tilde, is not well, and hasn't been for some time. Daniel has not actually seen his parents in awhile, and has never visited the quaint, rural farm they retired to, mostly due to wanting to hide his lifestyle from them. As the story unfolds, the reader is unsure which parent's version of events to believe, as is Daniel. This is mostly a page turner, but I think it does slow just a bit in the middle. The fast pace picks right back up toward the end when Daniel decides to go to Sweden to figure out his Mother's rambling story himself. What he finds is not at all what you'd expect. Loved the ending! 

Thursday, December 5, 2013

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson, 465 pages

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson, 465 pages

Mikael Blomkvist has been convicted of libel against a pretty corrupt businessman.  So when Henrik Vanger calls and says that he can give Blomkvist proof of the man's corruption if he agrees to investigate an unsolved murder, of course Blomkvist agrees.  He starts investigating a family mystery from the 1960s, and with the help of Lisbeth Salander, hacker extraordinaire, he comes so close to the truth that his life is in jeopardy.

I really wanted to like this book, because Lisbeth Salander is an appealing character- a tech-savvy young woman who doesn't care about anyone or anything, but handles her own and takes care of business.  However, this book was really unpleasant with the amount of graphic violence and rape.  I want everything to turn out alright for Lisbeth Salander, but not enough to finish the series.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Yes, Chef: A Memoir by Marcus Samuelsson

Yes, Chef: A Memoir by Marcus Samuelsson, 336 pages

Samelsson was orphaned at three in Ethiopia and raised in Sweden by an adoptive family.  His path from absolute poverty and despair to being a world reknowned chef is an inspiring look at what anyone can accomplish with the drive to be the best.  Samuellson explores the dichotomy between who he was born as and who he became through the influences on his life in both the kitchen and in the everyday world.  I found his perspective on being treated as an outsider due to skin color or accent in every culture: in the professional kitchen, in Sweden, in America and even in Ethiopia, to be an intriguing look at what it means to truly feel like you belong somewhere. 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Midwinter Blood by Mons Kallentoft

Midwinter Blood by Mons Kallentoft - 464 pages

This Swedish mystery opens with the discovery of a horribly mutilated obese corpse hung in the trees on the plains of Linköping, Sweden.  Superintendent Malin Fors is called to the scene and the investigation leads her into the twisted underground of the dysfunctional people of the plains.  Swedish crime novels are for the most part very spare and stark which can be an acquired taste.  The pacing in this novel was a little slow but the psychological thriller elements were strong enough to keep my interested.  I did find the parts of the narrative that were from the perspective of the corpse to be a little disconcerting.  This book will appeal to fans of Stieg Larsson.