Vera Marie's Reviews > The Year of the Hare
The Year of the Hare
by Arto Paasilinna
by Arto Paasilinna
If you are too timid to actually cut all the ties to your "civilized" life, but still have a yearning to get away from clocks and calendars, >Arto Paasilinna'>s Year of the Hare provides the perfect escape literature. A journalist riding across Finland with a photographer, feels the car hit a hare (not a bunny rabbit--hares are larger, related to jack rabbits ). Vatanen, the journalist, gets out to check on the hare, who has retreated into the woods with his broken leg, and the two of them just keep going.
This is no cutsey cartoon version of a Bugs Bunny, but a portrayal of a real animal, and a human who takes responsibility for the fellow animal's well being. Nevertheless, at times the book seems a bit whimsical, but that may be a trait read in by the reader who cannot truly imagine someone just walking away form job, wife, friends, and all those THINGS that surround our lives. But whimsical or not,The Year of the Harewill have you laughing and gasping by turns, as the man and the hare live through adventures that spiral from normal to fantastically bizarre, from heart warming to life threatening. All this happens in less than 200 pages, in chapters that range from four pages to ten. The writing is as spare and clean as the lines of Scandinavian design.
While we get a good picture of the Finnish countryside in this book, and some snapshots of an unmistakably "foreign" culture, the thing that struck me most was the universality of reactions of the people to Vatanen and his hare. From suspicion of his motives, to off-handed "its his own business", to officious requirements for the proper papers, to those who wanted to make a buck off the situation. I doubt that these reactions would vary much from country to country. Author Paasilinna portrays humanity in its many varieties--not just Finnish humanity.
One couple is frightened when he appears at their door, and calls the police. who talk like policemen always do.
That bit of dialogue cracks me up. The humor in this book just sneaks up on you. Everything about the book is as gentle as the handling of the hare by his sympathetic rescurer.
Paasilinna is the author of 30 books, and it is a shame that he is not better known in America. The Year of the Harewas first published in Great Britain in 1995, and in America in 2006. The current Penguin edition, with an introduction by travel writer Pico Iyer, came out in 2010.
Pico Iyer, by the way, is the perfect person to write an introduction, as he burst into the public eye when he left a promising career with a major magazine and turned to travel and freelance writing. I love his capsule description of the book:
Of the many lines in this book that I cherished, the last is one of the most delicious.
This is no cutsey cartoon version of a Bugs Bunny, but a portrayal of a real animal, and a human who takes responsibility for the fellow animal's well being. Nevertheless, at times the book seems a bit whimsical, but that may be a trait read in by the reader who cannot truly imagine someone just walking away form job, wife, friends, and all those THINGS that surround our lives. But whimsical or not,The Year of the Harewill have you laughing and gasping by turns, as the man and the hare live through adventures that spiral from normal to fantastically bizarre, from heart warming to life threatening. All this happens in less than 200 pages, in chapters that range from four pages to ten. The writing is as spare and clean as the lines of Scandinavian design.
While we get a good picture of the Finnish countryside in this book, and some snapshots of an unmistakably "foreign" culture, the thing that struck me most was the universality of reactions of the people to Vatanen and his hare. From suspicion of his motives, to off-handed "its his own business", to officious requirements for the proper papers, to those who wanted to make a buck off the situation. I doubt that these reactions would vary much from country to country. Author Paasilinna portrays humanity in its many varieties--not just Finnish humanity.
One couple is frightened when he appears at their door, and calls the police. who talk like policemen always do.
"Okay," the constables said. "What've you been up to?"
"I asked them to call for a taxi, but they've called for you instead."
"And am I right in thinking you've got a hare with you?"
....The hare peered nervously out of the basket, looking somehow guilty.
The constables gave each other a look, nodding, and one of them said: "Okay, sir; better come along with us. Hand over the basket."
That bit of dialogue cracks me up. The humor in this book just sneaks up on you. Everything about the book is as gentle as the handling of the hare by his sympathetic rescurer.
Paasilinna is the author of 30 books, and it is a shame that he is not better known in America. The Year of the Harewas first published in Great Britain in 1995, and in America in 2006. The current Penguin edition, with an introduction by travel writer Pico Iyer, came out in 2010.
Pico Iyer, by the way, is the perfect person to write an introduction, as he burst into the public eye when he left a promising career with a major magazine and turned to travel and freelance writing. I love his capsule description of the book:
It sometimes feels--such is the runaway pace of the shaggy-hare subversion--that the whole novel is drunk, starting out relatively upright and conventional but soon keeling over, rubbing its forehead, and wondering what in the world is going to happen next.
Of the many lines in this book that I cherished, the last is one of the most delicious.
"...Vatanen is a man to be reckoned with."[blockquote]
So is this book.
Original Review at A Traveler's Library.com
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