469 books
—
313 voters
Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read.
Start by marking “Bottled Goods” as Want to Read:
Bottled Goods
by
Longlisted for the 2019 Women's Prize, this poignant, lyrical novel is set in 1970s Romania during Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's regime--and depicts childhood, marriage, family, and identity in the face of extreme obstacles.
Alina yearns for freedom. She and her husband Liviu are teachers in their twenties, living under the repressive regime of Communist dictator N ...more
Alina yearns for freedom. She and her husband Liviu are teachers in their twenties, living under the repressive regime of Communist dictator N ...more
Get A Copy
Paperback, 190 pages
Published
July 11th 2018
by Fairlight Books
Friend Reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book,
please sign up.
Reader Q&A
To ask other readers questions about
Bottled Goods,
please sign up.
Be the first to ask a question about Bottled Goods
Community Reviews
Showing 1-30
Start your review of Bottled Goods
*If you attempt any political comments, think again. You can’t win an argument with me, thank you.*
‘’Twenty years later, an icon of the Saviour will hang in this spot, but in 1975, it’s Ceaușescu’s depiction that the children must revere.’’
Alina and Liviu, a young married couple, have the dreadful misfortune of living in a country oppressed and vilified by the Beloved Leader, Νicolae Ceaușescu, one of the many ‘’Beloved Leaders’’ born out of one of the darkest periods in History. Romania, t ...more
‘’Twenty years later, an icon of the Saviour will hang in this spot, but in 1975, it’s Ceaușescu’s depiction that the children must revere.’’
Alina and Liviu, a young married couple, have the dreadful misfortune of living in a country oppressed and vilified by the Beloved Leader, Νicolae Ceaușescu, one of the many ‘’Beloved Leaders’’ born out of one of the darkest periods in History. Romania, t ...more
My reviews can also be seen at: https://deesradreadsandreviews.wordpr...
An interesting and unique read!
“Bottled Goods is written in short bursts of “flash fiction” and explores universal themes of empowerment, liberty, family, and loyalty.”
Bottled Goods is set in the 1970’s Romania during Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu’s repressive regime. Alina and her husband, Liviu are both teachers living in Romania. While life is far from easy, they are relatively happy.
Then came the Saturday when eve ...more
Now longlisted for the Women's Prize 2019.
Re read following its longlisting for the 2019 Republic of Consciousness Prize.
This book is published by Fairlight Books, a new UK small press which “has one aim – to celebrate quality writing and promote the best of new and contemporary literary fiction.” and with a mission “to promote contemporary literary fiction and quality writing, whatever the genre and however it is published”
This book is one of the first of their Fairlight Moderns series, a serie ...more
Re read following its longlisting for the 2019 Republic of Consciousness Prize.
This book is published by Fairlight Books, a new UK small press which “has one aim – to celebrate quality writing and promote the best of new and contemporary literary fiction.” and with a mission “to promote contemporary literary fiction and quality writing, whatever the genre and however it is published”
This book is one of the first of their Fairlight Moderns series, a serie ...more
Jul 30, 2020
Jennifer ~ TarHeelReader
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
dining-room-1
I think I’ve only read one other book set in Romania, a historical, The Girl They Left Behind. Bottled Goods is a slim novel at less than 200 pages and was nominated for the 2019 Women’s Prize. The book is set during the 1970s when Communist dictator Ceausescu was in power.
Alina seeks freedom. She is a teacher, along with her husband, Liviu. When her brother-in-law defects, it leaves Alina and Liviu under suspicion and harsh surveillance. Alina is surrounded by difficulty - her mother, an angry ...more
Alina seeks freedom. She is a teacher, along with her husband, Liviu. When her brother-in-law defects, it leaves Alina and Liviu under suspicion and harsh surveillance. Alina is surrounded by difficulty - her mother, an angry ...more
I had not heard of this book before it was announced as one of the Women's Prize long list. It is a short read told in flash style, like lists and little vignettes, set in Romania during the Ceaușescu era (1970s.)
Alina married a man in a lower class and really starts to regret it when his brother leaves the country without permission, making them a new target for the secret police. Mix that kind of oppression and intrigue with a folksy fantasy element and you end up with a unique read! I loved t ...more
Alina married a man in a lower class and really starts to regret it when his brother leaves the country without permission, making them a new target for the secret police. Mix that kind of oppression and intrigue with a folksy fantasy element and you end up with a unique read! I loved t ...more
Read this in one sitting. Amazing, cute design, and the story is so well written in with a distinctive style, I'm not surprised van Llewyn used to write Flash Fiction!
So good, full review soon.
A message to GR: When you will let me allow giving 4.5 stars! Grr! ...more
So good, full review soon.
A message to GR: When you will let me allow giving 4.5 stars! Grr! ...more
I think Bottled Goods is an interesting, impressive book in a number of ways, but I can’t help but to feel a bit underwhelmed by it. It tells the story of Alina, a young woman living in 1970s communist Romania, whose family comes under surveillance when her brother-in-law defects to the west. Blending a quotidian story with elements of Romanian folklore, this book is a unique, magical creation that I think will satisfy a lot of readers despite its brevity.
But while I was particularly intrigued b ...more
But while I was particularly intrigued b ...more
Longlisted for the Republic of Consciousness Prize 2019
Some of the reviews I have seen have focused on it being a novella in flash fiction, and although some "chapters" have been published in flash fiction collections, this element is easy to ignore, as there is a clear narrative arc, the whole feels like a novel, and most of the chapters are four to five pages long.
About half of the novel feels like a realistic portrayal of ordinary life in the brutal and extraordinary society of Ceaucescu's Ro ...more
Some of the reviews I have seen have focused on it being a novella in flash fiction, and although some "chapters" have been published in flash fiction collections, this element is easy to ignore, as there is a clear narrative arc, the whole feels like a novel, and most of the chapters are four to five pages long.
About half of the novel feels like a realistic portrayal of ordinary life in the brutal and extraordinary society of Ceaucescu's Ro ...more
(Nearly 4.5) “Sometimes I think there is something deeply wrong with this country.” I thoroughly enjoyed this short collection of fragmentary imaginings of life at the tail end of Communism in Romania. It’s a terrific hybrid work that manages to combine several of my favorite forms: a novella, flash fiction and linked short stories. The content is also an intriguing blend, of the horrific and the magical. After her brother-in-law’s defection, Alina and her husband Liviu come under extra scrutiny
...more
4.5
I read Bottled Goods in two sittings. It's a small book which I found extremely compelling.
First of all, I had no idea what flash fiction was, but whatever the definition is, I liked it. A lot.
This book resonated with me on a personal level, as I am a Romanian child of the 70s, so many of the stories, descriptions, foods, rituals, behaviours, social and work relations were very familiar.
I thought van Llewyn accomplished so much with so little. The structure worked incredibly well to put toget ...more
I read Bottled Goods in two sittings. It's a small book which I found extremely compelling.
First of all, I had no idea what flash fiction was, but whatever the definition is, I liked it. A lot.
This book resonated with me on a personal level, as I am a Romanian child of the 70s, so many of the stories, descriptions, foods, rituals, behaviours, social and work relations were very familiar.
I thought van Llewyn accomplished so much with so little. The structure worked incredibly well to put toget ...more
This book was really not for me – and this is weird because I really thought it would be. I love novels told in short stories and I love books inspired by Eastern European fairy tales. But I really failed to connect to this book. Part of this has to do with the fact that I read so many similar books that this felt derivative in a way that feels mean to communicate (drawing on real life atrocities as it is).
Told in short, flash fiction like chapters, this is Alina’s story, as she is navigating an ...more
Told in short, flash fiction like chapters, this is Alina’s story, as she is navigating an ...more
This novel is the first by flash fiction author van Llewyn. I wasn't familiar with the genre but after reading this novel, I'm a fan. The story is set in Romania in the era of Ceausescu. It is the era of the Iron Curtain and a communist dictatorship. The mood of the novel is at times bleak. Alina is a teacher and is under investigation, and constant harassment, for allegedly not reporting who student who brought contraband to school. Her brother-in-law defects which causes further problems espec
...more
Bottled Goods
is a simple tale of life in the Socialist Republic of Romania during the late 1960s and ‘70s. Or is it? What starts out as the story of schoolgirl Alina growing up in Bucharest with her somewhat eccentric family morphs perplexingly into full-blown magical realism three-quarters of the way through, after which elements become unexpectedly surreal.
Alina is a twentysomething school teacher when she and her husband Liviu find themselves of significant interest to Ceaușescu’s secret ...more
Alina is a twentysomething school teacher when she and her husband Liviu find themselves of significant interest to Ceaușescu’s secret ...more
Right from the first chapter the reader is left with no doubt that this book is steeped in magical realism. Alina is on her way to bury her Grandfather who was shrunk by her Grandmother to escape capture when the communists took over Romania. It’s as if the author, Sophia van Llewyn, is saying, if you don’t like magical realism then get out now.
Alina is twenty years old, a teacher, living in Communist Romania. The year is 1967. The Cold War is still encasing the country in ice. Things start to g ...more
Alina is twenty years old, a teacher, living in Communist Romania. The year is 1967. The Cold War is still encasing the country in ice. Things start to g ...more
This book is on the long list for Women's Prize for fiction this year, and I'm glad it is. Otherwise I might not even pick it up.
It's the story of Alina, who was living in 1970s Romania under oppressive communist government. Quickly, we're introduced to her husband, mother and aunt, who are the side characters who compliment her story. The main content of the book is to shed light to the difficulties, details and life style of the times in Romania when the government decided how you should live ...more
It's the story of Alina, who was living in 1970s Romania under oppressive communist government. Quickly, we're introduced to her husband, mother and aunt, who are the side characters who compliment her story. The main content of the book is to shed light to the difficulties, details and life style of the times in Romania when the government decided how you should live ...more
This collection of flash fiction creates a story of oppression in 1970s Romania. Alina is a young wife and teacher. When her brother-in-law defects to France, she and her husband come under close scrutiny of the government. Told through multiple linked vignettes, together they create a darkly humorous and frightening tale. 3.5⭐️
LONGLISTED FOR WOMEN’S PRIZE IN FICTION
BOOK 10 OF 16 READ SO FAR
I was very much enamoured by this short novel about the struggles of a young Romanian wife living under the claustrophobic eyes of the Stalinist regime, perfectly capturing the tone of life during that period and using a dash of magical realism to metaphor the lengths one went to escape. Just as fascinating is how this book was put together, a series of separately written works of flash fiction brought together in this unitary form ...more
BOOK 10 OF 16 READ SO FAR
I was very much enamoured by this short novel about the struggles of a young Romanian wife living under the claustrophobic eyes of the Stalinist regime, perfectly capturing the tone of life during that period and using a dash of magical realism to metaphor the lengths one went to escape. Just as fascinating is how this book was put together, a series of separately written works of flash fiction brought together in this unitary form ...more
Like most of my GR friends, I was enticed into reading this slim volume due to its inclusion on both the Women's Prize and RofC longlists... as well as the intriguing cover (the mystical black cat looks a lot like my own Priyanka!). I more or less read it on one sitting, which I think helped - not much to say about the actual storyline; I didn't know a LOT about the Romania/Ceausescu regime, and so I learned a lot in a somewhat 'fun' fashion, which is not something usually associated with the to
...more
The short punchy chapters which make up Sophie Van Llewyn's “Bottled Goods” have the feel of flash fiction. They are a sequence of snippets (usually in the form of diary entries or lists) in its protagonist Alina's life within communist Romania. Together they form a portrait of this period of the 1970s rife with paranoia and fear of the secret services. In this hostile environment Alina can't even trust her mother. Like in the novel “Milkman” it's best to go unnoticed in this fractured society.
...more
‘’Please make me a child again. A teenager. A student. A girl who hasn’t lost her father yet or her romantic views concerning the world, poverty, kindness, a parent’s love.’’
“Freedom is not something that anybody can be given,” James Baldwin wrote while contemplating the manner in which we imprison ourselves, “freedom is something people take and people are as free as they want to be.” In other words, the idea of freedom is not absolute. Rather, it exists as a relative entity, guarded by its o ...more
“Freedom is not something that anybody can be given,” James Baldwin wrote while contemplating the manner in which we imprison ourselves, “freedom is something people take and people are as free as they want to be.” In other words, the idea of freedom is not absolute. Rather, it exists as a relative entity, guarded by its o ...more
Now Longlisted for the Women’s Prize 2019!
also Longlisted for the 2019 Republic of Consciousness Prize
The RoC judges' citation:
also Longlisted for the 2019 Republic of Consciousness Prize
The RoC judges' citation:
This time last year, Fairlight Books announced its arrival on the small press scene with the beautifully designed Fairlight Moderns. Its first submission is Bottled Goods: a wholly successful attempt at creating novel(la)-length flash fiction. An assured debut which is part-absurdist, part-thriller, part-social realism. If you’re looking for intrigue, psychological depth...more
Bottled Goods is described as a novella in flash fiction. It is structured in short chapters with each offering a window into everyday life in Romania under Ceaușescu. The plot moves forward apace.
The protagonist is a young woman named Alina whose wealthy family lost their land to the communist government before she was born. Her mother is an apparent zealot for the regime, although this may be her way of retaining control over her daughter who has a tendency to dream of fulfilling yearnings of ...more
The protagonist is a young woman named Alina whose wealthy family lost their land to the communist government before she was born. Her mother is an apparent zealot for the regime, although this may be her way of retaining control over her daughter who has a tendency to dream of fulfilling yearnings of ...more
[4.25*]
I am very impressed by this book and its author. Its unusual structure of interconnected flash fiction pieces ensures that each piece packs a punch both in relation to the whole and as a separate entity. It is creative but not exhausting in its creativity. Besides that, Sophie van Llewyn gets extra points for writing beautifully in the language that is not her first.
Two themes are important here. Obviously, the theme of repression and oppression, not so much physical but rather mental (al ...more
I am very impressed by this book and its author. Its unusual structure of interconnected flash fiction pieces ensures that each piece packs a punch both in relation to the whole and as a separate entity. It is creative but not exhausting in its creativity. Besides that, Sophie van Llewyn gets extra points for writing beautifully in the language that is not her first.
Two themes are important here. Obviously, the theme of repression and oppression, not so much physical but rather mental (al ...more
May 14, 2019
Jennifer (Insert Lit Pun)
added it
What a weird, bleak little book. It has a sort of off-kilter power to it, but ultimately reads more like connected flash fiction than a cohesive novel.
Read my interview with Sophie here
----
Romanian readers might feel that Sophie ticked all the necessary boxes in terms of life under communism, and it might sound like yet another book about the old regime, however—and this is tricky and innovative, hats off to Sophie—once the magical realism kicks in, the book is not what you expect anymore.
What made the book interesting for me, as someone who lived under the regime and is not surprised by the actual facts, was the form—the novella reads like a ...more
----
Romanian readers might feel that Sophie ticked all the necessary boxes in terms of life under communism, and it might sound like yet another book about the old regime, however—and this is tricky and innovative, hats off to Sophie—once the magical realism kicks in, the book is not what you expect anymore.
What made the book interesting for me, as someone who lived under the regime and is not surprised by the actual facts, was the form—the novella reads like a ...more
I'm finding this one difficult to rate and review, because it was unlike anything I've ever read before. On reflection, I feel that the use of the "flash fiction" style (which I'd never encountered before) was successful with this material - rather than a traditional narrative, the chapters comprised standalone vignettes set at various points along the timeline of the story. Indeed, several of the chapters contained within "Bottled Goods" have previously been published individually as short piec
...more
Bottled Goods is a new way to tell an old story – a story the author poignantly dedicates to the heroes of the 89 Romanian Revolution.
A couple tries to flee a country immersed in a dictatorship where torture, censorship, the petty tyranny of officials, blackmail, and cruelty abounds. Brothers denounce brothers, mothers denounce daughters. Not much is new here. However, Sophie van Llewyn introduces her own twist: a visceral connection between family, magic, and folklore, a sort of Eastern Europe ...more
A couple tries to flee a country immersed in a dictatorship where torture, censorship, the petty tyranny of officials, blackmail, and cruelty abounds. Brothers denounce brothers, mothers denounce daughters. Not much is new here. However, Sophie van Llewyn introduces her own twist: a visceral connection between family, magic, and folklore, a sort of Eastern Europe ...more
Mar 18, 2019
ns510
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
women-s-prize-for-fiction
“I don’t care if they bring you here in chains like a wild beast. A wild child you were, an ungrateful woman you’ve grown to be, ungrateful to me, shame, shame, shame! Cursed, cursed, cursed you are, for being selfish and never thinking of me!”
I really enjoyed this little gem of a book. Composed of 51 short chapters of flash fiction, some of which had previously been published individually, readers of this ‘novella-in-flash’ Bottled Goods have the benefit of reading them all at once, appreciati ...more
I really enjoyed this little gem of a book. Composed of 51 short chapters of flash fiction, some of which had previously been published individually, readers of this ‘novella-in-flash’ Bottled Goods have the benefit of reading them all at once, appreciati ...more
When Liviu's brother defects to the West, he and his wife Alina are hounded by the Romanian Communist authorities. We are in the 1970s, at the height of the Cold War, and not even well-connected Aunt Theresa, who practices the forbidden old folk ways even whilst her son works for the regime, can save Alina and Liviu from the unwelcome attentions of the Secret Police. The constant danger blights a relationship which could, and should, have been a special one.
Totalitarian rule casts a shadow on t ...more
Another good read from the Women's Prize for Fiction long list. I love the way Van Llewyn blends flash fiction and a bit of magical realism to tell a woman living in Romania under Ceausescu's repressive Communist regime.
...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play Book Tag: Bottled Goods - Sophie van Llewyn - 4 stars | 3 | 13 | Apr 02, 2019 03:07AM | |
| The Mookse and th...: 2019 WP Longlist - Bottled Goods | 25 | 60 | Mar 31, 2019 10:10AM |
Sophie van Llewyn is a Romanian-born author of historical fiction. She now lives in Germany.
Her novella-in-flash BOTTLED GOODS (Fairlight Books) was longlisted for the Women's Prize 2019, for the Republic of Consciousness Prize 2019 and for the People's Book Prize.
Sophie's work was published in various print and online journals, such as The Guardian, New Delta Review, Ambit, Litro, New South, Ba ...more
Her novella-in-flash BOTTLED GOODS (Fairlight Books) was longlisted for the Women's Prize 2019, for the Republic of Consciousness Prize 2019 and for the People's Book Prize.
Sophie's work was published in various print and online journals, such as The Guardian, New Delta Review, Ambit, Litro, New South, Ba ...more
Related Articles
As this strange summer of staying put winds down, one thing remains truer than ever: Books offer us endless adventure and new horizons to...
57 likes · 30 comments
No trivia or quizzes yet. Add some now »
















