Independent People (Panther)
by Halldór Kiljan Laxness
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 506)
bookshelves:
20th-century-classics,
icelandic-literature
Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
Anyone who loves literature
No less than the best book I have read so far in my life. Laxness has been called the Icelandic Hardy or Steinbeck, or as I see on this site, the Icelandic Gabriel García Márquez. There are elements of truth in all these, but none does him justice. Don't think of Laxness as the Icelandic version of someone else; think of him as a fantastic (Nobel Prize-winning) author, who just happens to be Icelandic.
Independent People tells the story of Bjartur of Summerhouses, his family (especially his...more
Independent People tells the story of Bjartur of Summerhouses, his family (especially his...more
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Read in January, 2008
Hardship and frontier sagas have their own man vs. nature fan club, whose meetings I rarely attend. When you overlay the whole elemental drama with an exposition of the honest, working man’s helplessness in the face of the manipulative rich people who advance capitalism and modernity, a grim sub-genre emerges. It was done perfectly with “The Grapes of Wrath” and a guild of other page-fillers have knocked out an unnecessary pile of novels that tell similar tales ad nauseum.
Certainly, L...more
Certainly, L...more
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Read in February, 2008
Emily randomly picked up this book for me in Powells a few years ago, and, after seeing it on our shelf, Brian selected it for book club. I don't know if I ever would have bumped into it on my own, which makes me understand Brad Leithauser's comment in the introduction that discovering "Independent People" makes you feel supremely lucky. What are the odds of stumbling upon an almost 500-page, densely woven, Icelandic novel from the 1940s, and further, what are the odds that it would ...more
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Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone who likes crudely fashioned wooden cups
This book is amazing. It's not just good - though it is - but it amazes me. It's odd. It has a strange rhythm to it, sort of a lilt, like a witch's chant in some dark woods. It has witches in it, and sheep, and men, and dreams of far-off countries and houses and more sheep. It has people in it too. People that you fall in love with though they've done nothing to deserve it and couldn't care less, which only makes you love them more.
The book is a saga set in Iceland around WWI, follow...more
The book is a saga set in Iceland around WWI, follow...more
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bookshelves:
fiction,
iceland
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
lovers of icelandic history; those who like detailed writing
Despite the reviews below, this book is not about sheep.
Independent People is about the complex intersection of pride and poverty. It is the story of the fiercely strong and intelligent everyman who has little to show for their successes yet holds their successes with high esteem. It is also about how one's endless struggle to be self-sufficient can make one bitter, senseless, hypocritical and cold.
This book is not about sheep at all. Main character Bjartur is preoccupied with sheep...more
Independent People is about the complex intersection of pride and poverty. It is the story of the fiercely strong and intelligent everyman who has little to show for their successes yet holds their successes with high esteem. It is also about how one's endless struggle to be self-sufficient can make one bitter, senseless, hypocritical and cold.
This book is not about sheep at all. Main character Bjartur is preoccupied with sheep...more
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Read in April, 2008
If there were half stars, this would be 3.5. The writing is wonderful, and the way that Laxness captures the landscape and people is truly impressive (when I started the book, we were in Iceland, and I was reading it aloud to my wife as we drove through the same harsh landscapes that he describes, which benefited both our experience of the book and of even the most barren countryside). That said, Bjartur of Summerhouses is one of the most frustrating main characters I've ever encountered, and by...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Anna by:
Erin
The first third of the book is so filled with misery as to be off-putting, but has sufficient points of light to keep one reading until the second 'book', when little waves of beauty and tenderness come lapping up to comfort you through the harsh Icelandic winter. There are, for instance, passages transcribing the inner lives of children that are heartbreakingly acute, and with great tenderness you are lead along with the characters until their actions seem inevitable and right, even as you dre...more
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bookshelves:
iceland-fiction
Read in June, 2007
I read this book during a vacation in Iceland, which is where my grandmother was born. The bleak landscape we drove through helped bring the book to life, and the book made me feel I had a better understanding of both my grandmother and the people we ran into along the way in Iceland. I found the book hard to get through - its main character is such a dour, unpleasant person, and there is so little relief of anything good happening to anyone. Bleak is the word. On one stretch of road that went h...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
Vikings, farmers, unwed teenage mothers, fathers of unwed teenage mothers
Sometimes its hard to get up for the greats, you know? I mean, I dig literature, but sometimes you want to read some Calvin and Hobbes, or some Robert E. Howard, or possibly some paranormal romance about "the lonely ones," doomed to jaded, dusty centuries as wampyrs...I'm just kidding. If you read books about vampires, you deserve it when your children become goths.
But it was tough for me to plow through Independent People. Bjartur is about the least sympathetic protagonist sinc...more
But it was tough for me to plow through Independent People. Bjartur is about the least sympathetic protagonist sinc...more
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bookshelves:
1001-books,
literatur-nobelpreis,
romaneab1900
Read in May, 2008
It has been a long time since I have read a book that has meant so much to me. This reading experience literally transported me to the harsh landscape of Iceland and I was right there with the characters. Bjartur, the lonesome farmer, self-proclaimed independent protagonist is a man full of mistery. It is easy to hate him but yet I think one needs to take into consideration the more than harsh circumstances. Ultimately, his aim to be independent and to raise an independent family is a noble one ...more
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Read in January, 2008
This is an amazing book. It captures the essence of the rugged moorland icelandic shepherds life with brutal realism, ironic hilarity, poetical whimsy, and biting political commentary. This book really has it all, captures life in all its comic tragedy while giving a window into a world where sheep diarrhea is a primary topic of conversation. This is truly a book like no other. I spent the first 20 pages trying to decide if the author had his tongue in his cheek or had the earnestness of a missi...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
serious readers
To properly appreciate and read this book, on must hunker down on the cold heath, be it your home or abroad, ignore the heat or embrace the cold, and read each line as if it was the first.
Some books can be consumed whole, reading sentences, paragraphs, pages, all at once, your consciousness able to swallow great chunks and extract nutrition. But Laxness' book is not of this nature, it is the opposite - the larger chunks you swallow, the slower you must read, because on a fast reading you hav...more
Some books can be consumed whole, reading sentences, paragraphs, pages, all at once, your consciousness able to swallow great chunks and extract nutrition. But Laxness' book is not of this nature, it is the opposite - the larger chunks you swallow, the slower you must read, because on a fast reading you hav...more
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Read in August, 2006
This book is about sheep. And being cold. If you think about sheep, the reality of them, they're kinda dirty, kinda creepy, look a little like weird demon creatures. Same goes for a lot of things in this book. There ARE weird demon creatures and creepy men/women/children; some die spitting blood into the snow while some survive reindeer rides through ice-cold rivers in the middle of a night where time seems to have stopped; people dream long or briefly and inevitably lose their dreams; gnarled o...more
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Read in January, 1997
I read this in about 1997, on the recommendation of a friend. I read somewhere that there is an essential "Icelandic" feel to this book. Since I don't have an idea of what is Icelandic or not, I can only say that it seems to me to be a clear and sparely told story of hard people in a hard land. They have to be hard to survive killing cold, poverty, and a social system that is set up to grind the little people into the ground.
So many details spoke to another view of the world, a non-E...more
So many details spoke to another view of the world, a non-E...more
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Read in December, 2007
As many people will tell you, this book is about sheep. I discovered this book on my trip to Iceland, and only recently got through it. It's a long, slow read; wonderfully satirical; at times brutal and horrific; but always beautiful. It's easy to see why this won a Nobel Prize -- Laxness' use of language is masterful. Despite the slow-going, this is well worth the read. The main character's redemption (and the climax of the book) is such a simple, subtle scene you could almost miss it... a...more
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Originally published in 1946 and out of print for decades, this book by the Nobel Prize-winning Icelandic author is a huge, skaldic treat filled with satire, humor, pathos, cold weather and sheep. I read this book because it was highly recommended. It took me FOREVER to finish it, and, truthfully, I couldn't stand the main character. And then . . . it stayed with me for a long, long, long while. And I wanted to reread parts of it. It's poetic in an Icelandic saga kind of way. A great achievement...more
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Read in March, 2006
recommends it for:
everyone with patience for books and characters.
This is one of the books that, while reading it, I didn't really like it at all. I couldn't stand the main character, Bjartur, I hated the way he treated everyone around him, the story was depressing and slow and I just couldn't stand it. But as I got nearer to the end of the book, I started loving it more and more, and by the end, it had grown on me so much, it had become one of my favourite books.
So if you start reading it and feel like me about it, don't give up just yet. Try to get throug...more
So if you start reading it and feel like me about it, don't give up just yet. Try to get throug...more
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bookshelves:
favorite-novels,
literature
Read in January, 2004
This book fights it out with two others for the #1 spot in my hierarchy. It's deep, describing utter rural poverty and the transition from one socio-economic era to the next. This is one of those books that elucidates interior lives so well that you can really identify with the characters, while creating a social landscape around them that is vivid and concrete. I often describe it to friends as a "perfect" book because I didn't have any of those moments in the book that felt like hum...more
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recommends it for:
everyone
I have been in the process of reading this book for a very long time. It is not a book that makes you feel warm and happy all over. It is not a book that can be read quickly. It is about survival and pride and I think in the end what it costs someone when these two things become the only thing that matters. Oh, and it is set in Iceland. Iceland rules.
** ** **
I finished it. Whew. All I can say after finishing this is I am glad I have such an easy life. Puts thin...more
** ** **
I finished it. Whew. All I can say after finishing this is I am glad I have such an easy life. Puts thin...more
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Read in October, 1997
This book is thick and long. It is in fact a prose Icelandic epic. The advantage of this is that the story is very textured and every detail wrought. Often times however, whole sentences are repeated in this effort and since little of the story is boldly heroic a reader's attention often drifts. Neither rich nor poor come off well in a book that seems to question why we live at all. Even the last scene seems ambivalent about life's ultimate worthwhileness. This book is very much a labour to read...more
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book data (includes all editions)
avg rating (all editions): 4.27 (308 ratings) avg rating (this edition): 4.14 (21 ratings) number of reviews: 81popular shelves
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quote
"This was the first time that he has ever looked into the labyrinth of the human soul. He was very far from understanding what he saw. But what was of more value, he felt and suffered with her. In years that were yet to come, he relived this memory in song, in the most beautiful song this world has known. For the understanding of the soul's defencelessness, of the conflict between the two poles, is not the source of the greatest song. The source of the greatest song is sympathy."
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