book data
81 ratings, 3.93 average rating, 11 reviews
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published
October 14th 2003
by Vintage
binding
Paperback, 448 pages
isbn
1400034256
(isbn13: 9781400034253)
description
Sometimes grim, sometimes uproarious, and always captivating, Iceland’s Bell by Nobel Laureate Halldór Laxness is at once an updating of...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 129)
Read in August, 2008
Confession: I only got maybe 50 pages into this ~400-pager -- not even the old college try, really. And reading it did make me feel like I was back in my Russian Novel lit class in college -- this is very much, as far as I could tell, in the style of the 19th-century Russians who wrote in ponderous detail about the lives of the sprightly, sassy, heavy-drinking, petty-crime-committing, living-off-the-salt-of-the-unforgiving-land peasants. If you like that sort of thing, this'll be right up your...more
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recommends it for:
glaciers, beggars, poets
The glacier stream continued to pass by.
"Why silver? Why not gold?"
The blind man answered: "I've also worked gold."
"Why didn't you say gold then?" asked the distended one.
"I'm more fond of silver than gold." said the blind one.
"I'm more fond of gold," said the distended one.
"I've noticed that very few people are fond of gold for itself," said the blind one. "I'm fond of silver for itself."
The distended man turne...more
"Why silver? Why not gold?"
The blind man answered: "I've also worked gold."
"Why didn't you say gold then?" asked the distended one.
"I'm more fond of silver than gold." said the blind one.
"I'm more fond of gold," said the distended one.
"I've noticed that very few people are fond of gold for itself," said the blind one. "I'm fond of silver for itself."
The distended man turne...more
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bookshelves:
20th-century,
icelandic
This is his go at a historical novel, the story of Jón Hreggviðsson who possibly kills the King's (Danish) hangman in a drunken stupor; it's never quite clear whether he's guilty or not. Set at the end of the 17th Century and based on real historical events, Laxness paints a fairly unappealing image of early modern Iceland. Squalor, poverty, crime and fecklessness abound. I didn't enjoy it the first time round as much as I have other Laxness novels, but I intend to give it a second read as all...more
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Read in April, 2007
Not my favorite Laxness novel, but it is always good to read another book by this man. I love the characters and the matter-of-fact way Laxness tells the tale, allowing the absurdity of life to creep inside the narrative. This one attempts to follow the narrative structure of the Icelandic Sagas, and thus it lacks some of the psychological complexities of "World Light" or "Independent People", but it is nonetheless an excellent read.
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An excellent mix of history (Denmark's control of Iceland, Copenhagen fire, and the poverty the people of an isolated country) and some of the saddest, funniest and most determined characters Laxness has come up with. My highlights: The man who sells his wife for Brennevin, the man in the prison cell awaiting his death who practices by fitting his head on the chopping block each day and the darkly comic dialogue.
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Read in June, 2007
Laxness has given us a crazy, wonderful, hysterical, silly account of an historical lawsuit in Iceland. Follow the misadventure of poor Jon Hreggvidsson as he gets kicked all over Europe by nasty upper crust rotters and smug Danes. My favorite Laxness novel...
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whoa. highly enjoyable at times, but sometimes i really struggled to get through it. it was also really weird to read it in the desert, since it's set in the Great North.
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bookshelves:
european-literature,
europeanhistory
Read in January, 2008
This book was totally absorbing. It sounds boring, but isn't. Give it a shot- you won't regret it!
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Treasure of treasures; I'd give up a year of my life to spontaneously read Icelandic.
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bookshelves:
currently-reading
Definitely easier to read than Atom Station.
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bookshelves:
best-of-the-best
Just as good as Independent People
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