The Forest of Hours
by Kerstin Ekman
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The central character of this novel is Skord, a magical being who is neither man nor animal. The tale begins in the Middle Ages when Skord finds himself in a forest with no memory, no past and no language. He then observes the humans he meets there, and gradually begins to understand civilization.Tags
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It was a scrawny little troll, unknowing and guileless, and not much given to thinking at all. There was little more than fluttering, like the wings of jays, going on under that tussock of hair.
Skord is a creature of the forest – not a troll as I thought of trolls, and not very fantastic except that he has the gift, shaman-wise, of sending his consciousness into other beings (which he does by habit just for the trip), and he lives for the five hundred years of the novel. There are giants in the forest too: these are slow-lived and eon-slow of thought. Like Skord, they are more likely to be victims of humans, as humans develop from medieval to the industrial age. The forest is that of Sweden’s wild Skule, and as much a presence in show more the book as the sea in Moby Dick – both the real-as-real depiction and getting metaphysical about it too.
Skord, who cannot help but mimic what he hears and sees, learns from humans, interacts with them and slips into their world. This is the story of his knowledge gained of that world, his corruption by it, his possible escape from it and salvation? It’s the alien eye turned on us and on our history. The book is dark and grim, with gentle gleams. Skord is more acted upon than acting; he witnesses how strange we are, without any concern to judge us – he can be disturbingly detached, at our abysmal behaviour. Yet it is his empathy with vulnerable things, often animals or children, lives he can identify with, that is his grace. I experienced this as an anti-human book. Whether it is or not I don’t know, it remains enigmatic to me. It is a creatures’ book, however.
It has been translated into drop-dead gorgeous English. The translator, Anna Paterson, must have brought such art to it herself, even if the Swedish is this lovely.
In the end it may be too dark for me or for my comfort, but after two reads now this has got to be one of my most-admired books, certainly of recent ones. The woman is a genius. I’ll have to try her crime novel, Blackwater, that is above and beyond your usual crime novel, they say. Alas with a different translator, but again, a remote forest setting. show less
Skord is a creature of the forest – not a troll as I thought of trolls, and not very fantastic except that he has the gift, shaman-wise, of sending his consciousness into other beings (which he does by habit just for the trip), and he lives for the five hundred years of the novel. There are giants in the forest too: these are slow-lived and eon-slow of thought. Like Skord, they are more likely to be victims of humans, as humans develop from medieval to the industrial age. The forest is that of Sweden’s wild Skule, and as much a presence in show more the book as the sea in Moby Dick – both the real-as-real depiction and getting metaphysical about it too.
Skord, who cannot help but mimic what he hears and sees, learns from humans, interacts with them and slips into their world. This is the story of his knowledge gained of that world, his corruption by it, his possible escape from it and salvation? It’s the alien eye turned on us and on our history. The book is dark and grim, with gentle gleams. Skord is more acted upon than acting; he witnesses how strange we are, without any concern to judge us – he can be disturbingly detached, at our abysmal behaviour. Yet it is his empathy with vulnerable things, often animals or children, lives he can identify with, that is his grace. I experienced this as an anti-human book. Whether it is or not I don’t know, it remains enigmatic to me. It is a creatures’ book, however.
It has been translated into drop-dead gorgeous English. The translator, Anna Paterson, must have brought such art to it herself, even if the Swedish is this lovely.
In the end it may be too dark for me or for my comfort, but after two reads now this has got to be one of my most-admired books, certainly of recent ones. The woman is a genius. I’ll have to try her crime novel, Blackwater, that is above and beyond your usual crime novel, they say. Alas with a different translator, but again, a remote forest setting. show less
A very atmospheric and sad story. Skord is a troll who lives in the forest but, as human life encroaches, he becomes involved with what it is to be human. His life and travels; hopes and dreams become more and more intertwined as time goes on. He ages slowly, passing as a child as people he knows grow old and die.
This is not a story about the nicer things in life. We meet outlaws; prostitutes; armies; alchemists - all have their influence on Skord. He learns and dreams of becoming a doctor but fate conspires against him and he returns again and again to the forest of his birth. Time is uncertain; as years pass we see the changes but is there any hope for love and life.
Fascinating, bleak and slightly surreal. A wonderful book that I'll show more definitely want to read again - some day. show less
This is not a story about the nicer things in life. We meet outlaws; prostitutes; armies; alchemists - all have their influence on Skord. He learns and dreams of becoming a doctor but fate conspires against him and he returns again and again to the forest of his birth. Time is uncertain; as years pass we see the changes but is there any hope for love and life.
Fascinating, bleak and slightly surreal. A wonderful book that I'll show more definitely want to read again - some day. show less
After about 30 pages of the troll Skord wandering around the forest, I was extremely bored. A couple of weeks later I decided to give it another chance and it improved immediately. Maybe it was the fact that Skord started interacting with the humans who passed through the forest and learnt to understand their language so there was actually some plot to get my teeth into, or maybe I was just in the wrong mood when I started it. The most interesting parts were towards the end, when he was experimenting with alchemy.
Finally finished. This and Mythago Wood by Robert Holdstock were given as favourite books by Robert Macfarlane in a newspaper article. Couldn't stomach Mythago Wood but I did finish The Forest of Hours - and enjoyed quite a lot of it - but I'm left wondering what the point of it is. Didn't really teach me anything, no arc of plot, a very faint emotional journey. So in the future I shall stick to reading Rob Macfarlane's own books which are wonderful.
Finally finished. This and Mythago Wood by Robert Holdstock were given as favourite books by Robert Macfarlane in a newspaper article. Couldn't stomach Mythago Wood but I did finish The Forest of Hours - and enjoyed quite a lot of it - but I'm left wondering what the point of it is. Didn't really teach me anything, no arc of plot, a very faint emotional journey. So in the future I shall stick to reading Rob Macfarlane's own books which are wonderful.
A novel about a spiritual being living with and around humans over a period of five hundred years. Fascinating Swedish novel with a lot to say about the way we are made and how we relate to each other and the world.
A very mysterious book, from the author of Blackwater (which it pre-dates). A kind of history of Sweden, through the eyes of a troll, who, passing for a somewhat mis-shapen human, experiences the humans' world from the early middle ages through to the Renaissance, by virtue of a much longer than human life span. Fascinating, but oh so bleak.
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- Canonical title
- The Forest of Hours
- Original title
- Rövarna i Skuleskogen
- Original publication date
- 1988
- Original language
- Swedish
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Fantasy, Historical Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 813 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English
- LCC
- PT9876.15 .K55 .R68 — Language and Literature German, Dutch and Scandinavian literatures Swedish literature Individual authors or works 1961-2000
- BISAC
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- 311
- Popularity
- 102,664
- Reviews
- 12
- Rating
- (3.93)
- Languages
- 8 — Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 24

































































