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Loading... Astrid And Veronikaby Linda Olsson
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is a beautiful novel about two women – one in her 80s, the other in her 30s – who gradually become friends and offer each other solace by being there for one another, listening quietly, lovingly and with infinite patience. I loved the Scandinavian setting. Two isolated and very private women begin a friendship and gradually uncover their innermost feelings and and heartbreaking experiences. Veronika, a young woman in her 30's, comes to stay at a remote farmhouse in Sweden following the death of her lover in New Zealand. Her only neighbor is an odd, reclusive older woman--Astrid. As the year unfolds, a friendship develops between these very dissimilar women and they come to depend on one another for emotional solace and even redemption. The story is beautifully written and beautifully paced, unfolding with gentle slowness against the seasonal backdrop of Sweden and with a loving attention to detail that makes each page a pleasure to read. It touches on sensitive subjects--suicide, molestation, infanticide--but with a very light touch indeed. The controversial nature of some of the action discussed in the book, and Olsson's unique style would make it a good candidate for book club discussion. Our book club really enjoyed this book, and it gave us much to discuss. The two main characters are many faceted and very interesting. The writer makes you want to get to know them better. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)
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“I think that perhaps there are no such defining moments at all. Beginnings and ends are fluid, long chains of events where some links seem so insignificant and others so very momentous, while in fact all have the same weight. What may appear as a single dramatic moment is just a link between what was before and what comes after.”
Astrid & Veronika by Linda Olsson
I'm finishing this book today, and I have not fully processed all my reactions to it yet. It is a stunning novel, sparse, concisely detailed with no extra fluff. Two intertwining life stories of completely different people, and the serendipitous connections that unite them. Astrid is an elderly woman, isolated socially and geographically, and is haunted by horrific memories. Veronika is a modern young woman who befriends her, as she is recovering from her own tragedy. They discuss their pasts and help each other move on. Reading details about Sweden, an area completely unknown to me was especially pleasant (if I go I had better learn to like rye bread and herring). It made me also want to go hug my mom.
I appreciated that nothing in this was Hallmark movie-of-the-week material, and as each chapter unfolded I was genuinely surprised at some twists the story contained. Usually I can predict pretty well what comes next, and this had me floored. One character realizes that her decades old anger was directed at the wrong person, and that she had to recover from the damage that anger caused. It's not an easy story: technically it's simple to read but it brings up some very painful emotions, those that caused me to put it down for a day or two. Again, it's not a happy story, but it was strangely uplifting, in that these ones were able to see forward and not dwell on the past. Most of all, it seems to send the message that we can't possibly know what events have shaped the people we love, and all the pains they may have endured, but we can try to find a way to love them as is. Without feeling like we have to judge or condone what we don't understand. (