The Unseen
SHORTLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER INTERNATIONAL PRIZE 2017
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- 39,00 kr
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- 39,00 kr
Publisher Description
Shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize and the Dublin Literary Award
"An absolute masterpiece. Packed with understated emotion, stunning from beginning to end" Courttia Newland, author of A River Called Time
"A masterful and moving work of literature" Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Mercies
"Easily among the best books I have ever read" Eileen Battersby, Irish Times
"A beautifully crafted novel . . . Quite simply a brilliant piece of work" Charlie Connolly, New European
"A blunt, brilliant book" Tom Graham, Financial Times
Nobody can leave an island. An island is a cosmos in a nutshell, where the stars slumber in the grass beneath the snow. But occasionally someone tries . . .
Ingrid Barrøy is born on an island that bears her name - a holdfast for a single family, their livestock, their crops, their hopes and dreams.
Her father dreams of building a quay that will connect them to the mainland, but closer ties to the wider world come at a price. Her mother has her own dreams - more children, a smaller island, a different life - and there is one question Ingrid must never ask her.
Island life is hard, a living scratched from the dirt or trawled from the sea, so when Ingrid comes of age, she is sent to the mainland to work for one of the wealthy families on the coast.
But Norway too is waking up to a wider world, a modern world that is capricious and can be cruel. Tragedy strikes, and Ingrid must fight to protect the home she thought she had left behind.
Translated from the Norwegian by Don Bartlett and Don Shaw
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jacobsen's solemn, lyrical portrait of agrarian life (after Borders), the first in a trilogy, is set on the fictional remote Norwegian island of Barr y in the early 20th century, with the Barr y family its sole occupants. Jacobsen guides readers through the lives of Hans Barr y; his widowed father, Martin; unmarried younger sister, Barbro; wife, Maria; and three-year-old daughter, Ingrid, detailing the everyday toil of fishing, farming, and figuring out the next move to keep themselves afloat, as they increasingly depend on the mainland's market for their goods. Jacobsen alternates from rich descriptions of the landscape and the family's daily tasks to passages contrasting Barr y with the mainland, first established in a scene with a visit from Pastor Johannes Malmberget, who comes to consult with Hans Barr y about his daughter Ingrid's upcoming christening, and harbors bewilderment about the isolated family's outlook and way of life (the epigraph on Hans's mother's headstone "seems to proclaim that life is not worth living"). After the death of Martin and then Hans, the younger generation struggles to keep up with the demands of the Barr y way of life. Shaw and Bartlett brilliantly capture Jacobsen's saga in precise prose that offers a window into each character's point of view. This moving meditation on a family's tenuous relationship with the natural world is worth a look.