From the Bookshelf of Around the World in 80 Books

Find A Copy At

Group Discussions About This Book

No group discussions for this book yet.

What Members Thought

Tony
I picked this Swedish book up because it sounded interesting, but strange, and short -- and I'm generally game for strange science-fiction, especially if it's not too big an investment of time. Within the early pages, the reader meets a young woman who is being sent from some kind of city or settlement to an outlying one, in order to conduct market research on hygiene products. This tundra-covered landscape contains only two other settlements, all connected by an antiquated rail line, and the cl ...more
Jared
Nov 03, 2024 rated it it was ok
Fails to fully explore its central premise and ends up just being a bunch of dystopian tropes. Amatka is built around a fascinating linguistic premise, but it fails to really consider how language and society would have to be changed. Poetry should be a central theme but instead it's little more than a MacGuffin.

1984 both does dystopia society better and has more to say about language with Newspeak. Embassytown is a more engrossing story about linguistic realism.
...more
Anie
Jun 04, 2024 rated it liked it
An odd book - quiet, unsettling, and completely unclear to me what my opinions on this book really are. I liked it, but also found it a slog - I either was unable to focus on it or was absolutely sucked into it, no in between.
Daisy
Jun 19, 2017 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Pantteri
Mar 04, 2018 marked it as to-read
Rajivi
Jul 30, 2018 marked it as to-read
Shelves: library
Jenny
Nov 04, 2020 marked it as to-read
Snowtulip
Jun 05, 2023 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: dystopia, 3-5-stars, tt23