The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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On the Calculation of Volume I
International Booker Prize
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2025 Int Booker shortlist - On the Calculation of Volume I
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The Nordic Council Literature Prize, by contrast, was awarded to Volumes I-III as a whole (there are now V volumes overall of the planned VII).
That said the prose is excellent and I am now keen to read Volume II - indeed may interrupt my Booker reading to do so.
My quote heavy review - I see Henk's of the Dutch volume is similar - here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Not sure where the series goes in Volume III appeals so much - but let's see when it comes out - she certainly ends II on a cliffhanger.


And whether parts of one book have later significance. E.g. the Roman coin from Volume I, which is symbolic of her last 'normal' day as well as the way certain objects behave, in Volume II catches her attention (she has largely forgotten it) and prompt a whole digression on the Romans. Volume III?



The real worry will be if there's a TV series - but it lacks gratuitous nudity and dragons so probably not.
Think of the fun George Martin would have though with a book whose crucial scene, where she realises that her days are repeating starts as follows: It dawned on me at breaking the fast (in the D&D translation - the English has 'breakfast')

https://wordswithoutborders.org/read/...

I would think it might mean a discontinuity in the series in terms of translation style but there was an abrupt enough change anyway between I and II with the same translator.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...


Unlikely though.
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Translators are Sophia Hersi Smith and Jennifer Russell, and The Guardian has now added a correction its article.


Correct


https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...

I heard Balle last year at a local library and as I recall she claimed to not have a masterplan, but having to write the next one to find out where it goes :)



I'm also quite lukewarm on this. It seemed... a waste of a good concept. And like it could have been boiled down to 50 pages and therefore the septology boiled down to a duology (at best).
On the Calculation of Volume I, written by Solvej Balle and translated by Barbara J. Haveland, follows Tara Selter – a woman who has slipped out of time. Every morning, she wakes up to the 18th of November. She no longer expects to wake up to the 19th of November, and she no longer remembers the 17th of November as if it were yesterday. As Tara approaches her 365th 18th of November, she can’t shake the feeling that somewhere underneath the surface of this day, there’s a way to escape.
Find out more about the International Booker 2025-longlisted book: https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booke...