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Loading... Out Stealing Horses: A Novel (original 2003; edition 2008)by Per Petterson, Anne Born (Translator)
Work InformationOut Stealing Horses by Per Petterson (2003)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This took a tremendously long time to read for a short book because it was getting interrupted by library books with due dates and that might have affected how I felt about it but I just never really connected into the story. The narrator is an older man who moves to a rural Norwegian cabin where he spent time with his father for a summer as a child and the story moves around in time as the events unfold. It is well written and the places feel very real but I never really connected to the characters and the mystery of things unsaid qualities. I had read another novel by Petterson, To Siberia, and never understood any of it so perahps this was a step up but not enough to keep looking for his works. Here's what I wrote in 2009 about this read: "Good read. Quick read, simple prose, shorter novel. A older man recalls his 15th summer, the last spent with his father . . . In a coming-of-age tale set in Norway. Events during WWII, several years before that summer, affect a man, a woman, and their families for a lifetime. Lovely descriptions of Norway's forest lands in both summer and winter." Wonderfully written narrative! A blend of coming-of-age, nature writing and peripheral WWII. Per Petterson writes a complex, misguided and lyrical protagonist. Set in the villages, forests and lakes of rural Norway, this book paints a deep picture of one boy's summer experience with his father, and his retirement as an old man. "I'll have to go down there," I shouted. And before my father could say anything, I had jumped in and let myself skink until I stood on the riverbed. There I felt the current punch me in the back and pull at my arms, and I opened my eyes and saw the end of the trunk straight in front of me, got the loop over my head and fastened it where I wanted it to be. It all went so well I felt I could stand there a long time almost weightless and just hold my breath an keep hands around that log." I was thinking about my instinctive, irrational, and immediate rating of four stars for Out Stealing Horses, which is immaculately written, at times moving, and has a pedigree of many international literary awards to make its case. I was thinking about a feminist reading of this novel, which is set primarily in the masculine world of postwar rural Norway, and depicts the male bonding over work (mainly cutting and hauling timber). There is a subtle but unmistakable hostility towards women; the main female character is the mother of the narrator's friend, who collaborates in the anti-Nazi underground and enters the male world of work, only to be seen as a potential competitor for the father's affections. There are other clues of misogyny: the narrator's neglect of his grown daughter, moving back to the countryside without leaving so much as a phone number, the harsh tone he uses with his mother on a trip to a small town in Sweden, the fact that his ex-wives are barely alluded to or even named. The disappearance of Trond's father and the implied entry into the urban, female world of Oslo (as symbolized by the suit his mother buys for him at the end of the novel), is the precursor to the older Trond returning to the setting of his childhood memories with his father. There is a stereotype (heard on the old Prairie Home Companion show) of the Norwegian bachelor farmer on the plains of Minnesota and the Dakotas. Trond the elder is the pure distillation of this: a man who goes off to the country to die alone, away from the complications of society.
Le Norvégien Per Petterson signe un magnifique roman sur les saisons de la vie, sur ces moments qui font que l'on n'est soudain plus le même. AwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
After a meeting with his only neighbor, sixty-seven-year-old Trond is forced to reflect upon a long-ago incident that marks the beginning of a series of losses for Trond and his childhood friend, Jon. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)839.82374Literature German literature and literatures of related languages Other Germanic literatures Danish and Norwegian literatures Norwegian literature Norwegian Bokmål fiction 1900–2000 Late 20th century 1945–2000LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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