21st Century Literature discussion

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Out Stealing Horses
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Out Stealing Horses - Discussion of Part I (October 2014)
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Terry
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Oct 01, 2014 11:37AM

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I do plan to read this book, but I haven't finished The Orphan Master's Son yet, so I will probably be joining a bit later.

A question to start us off: Petterson has been widely praised for his descriptions of nature, and of small quiet moments in everyday life. How does his writing make these ordinary moments compelling? Which images of landscapes or domestic scenes stood out for you?



Something else that stood out to me is how the narrator describes "out stealing horses" as being nothing about theft, but rather a way to make their reality sound more exciting. Peterson's timing of this comment made me interpret it as a metaphor of life. How often do we wrap the pedestrian and mundane in bombastic verbiage?


Are there any comments in the reviews about the perceived quality of the translation? Or anyone here who has read it in both the original Norwegian and in English translation?
(Sidebar on the author from his Wiki entry:
"I kjølvannet, translated as In the Wake (2002), is a young man's story of losing his family in the Scandinavian Star ferry disaster in 1990 (Petterson himself lost his mother, father, younger brother and a niece in the disaster); it won the Brage Prize for 2000.")



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_Tra...
The wiki page is interesting, the quote from the author seems very much in the same voice that the book is written in. It has the same solidness, the same slowness and dignity.


Jon and Trond's fathers hauling logs (p. 61, NOOK):
"AND he was scarely in control, AND I realised then that what he was doing was challenging my father's authority, AND they took hold AND pulled AND swayed so that the sweat poured AND their shirts slowly turned dark on their backs AND the veins stood out on their foreheads AND necks AND on their arms as blue AND broad as the rivers on a map of the world: the Rio Grande, the Brahmaputra, the Nile."
Jon's father falls and his mother comforts him (p. 64):
AND for the first time I felt a flash of bitterness towards my father because he had ruined the most complete moment of my life up to then, AND suddenly it overwhelmed me, on the brink of rage, my hands shook AND I started to feel cold in the heat of the summer's day, AND I do not even remember whether I felt sorry for Jon's father, who was so obviously in pain; in the leg that was broken AND the shoulder he had fallen on."
Trond and his father out in nature (p. 66):
"AND we walked on our hands in the wet grass as the rain beat our rumps in a way so icily weird that I had to get back on my feet very soon, but never did anyone have cleaner arses that ours as we ran into the house again AND dried ourselves on two large towels AND massaged our skin with the coarse cloth to get the circulation going AND make the warmth come back, AND with a cock of his head my father looked at me AND said: "Well, so you're a man now."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_Tra...
..."
If I understand that link correctly, it made the short list, but did not win that particular award? Still no mean accolade. Thx for the info, Terry.


None of these sentences bother me (if I can ignore the capitalization). The first sentence having so much info in it adds to the feeling of a lot of things going on at once. All the toughness packed into one sentence contrasts the laid-back easiness in much of the novel and creates emotion. The second example does something similar for me. The third...I just find to be a humorous tidbit in the book. :-)

This too.
I've read about 60 pages of the book at this point. I love the rhythm of the prose. It feels to me like reading Dylan Thomas ("Fern Hill" or "Poem in October").


He is referring to 'La reproduction interdite' ('Not to be Reproduced'):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Not_to_b...
What do you think Trond means by this? What does it tell us about him?
Books mentioned in this topic
I kjølvannet (other topics)In the Wake (other topics)