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The story is simple but very moving. I sometimes felt that parts of it was dated, but at the same time it is also very update, love doesn't change does it?
Söderberg is also the master of portraying the city of Stockholm, regarded as one of the most beautiful cities in Europe.
This is a fine piece of writing, which I can recommend to anyone who wants read a moving story about love and loss and anyone interested in Swedish literature.
And a word for the translator: Bravo! I particularly appreciated the cleanness, the unwordyness of the prose that gives it a modern ring in the good sense of the word.
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One day a young lady named Helga provides his life a twist, coming to his examination room, pleading for him to declare she has an "infection of the womb", so her husband of six years, Pastor Gregorius, will not touch her sexually. In truth, she has another man in mind. Glas knows Gregorius personally, and despises him for his own reasons, but after some moral agonizing, the young doctor takes the bull by the horns, "diagnosing" Gregorius with a "weak heart", telling him sex could kill him. This medically-enforced chastity drives Gregorius mad, and he "rapes" his wife out of frustration one night. To diffuse the elevating tension, Gregorius takes a brief trip to another town, during which his wife openly appears in public with her lover back home on Stockholm's streets. Glas, the first-person narrator of this book, reflects on the meaning of life, recalling the young girls he knew earlier in life, admitting he has never held a female in an embrace, and finding himself falling in love with Helga himself.
In his diary, Glas wonders if abortion and murder are not similar, in the sense that both relieve a burden of life. Glas wonders if Gregorius could justifiably be killed to relieve the "burden" upon his wife Helga. He reflects on morality, love, sex, and religion, his thoughts become increasingly feverish. He debates the issue through his diary, turning through various twists of logic, trying to find a relative position which is simultaneously moral and expedient. He even goes so far as to prepare two tablets of potassium cyanide, one for the pastor, and one for himself, should his plan go badly. He clearly loses mental clarity with his obsession over this issue.
Will he actually try to kill Gregorius? Will he woo Helga for himself? Will he drop the entire issue, and snap back to reality? Will he accomplish the impossible reconciliation between morality and his impulses? The resolution will be an interesting one, but Glas will offer only one insight: "Life, I do not understand you."
The book itself is nicely written, the prose lovely of description, polite, high-toned, and at times romantic, and the subject matter frank, from schoolboy wonderment and embarrassment, to "husband's rights" and the moral place of abortion, euthanasia, murder, love, sex, infidelity, and unrequited love in society. The narration is elegant, and this brief novel (150pp) is actually surprisingly substantial. The tone is thoughtful throughout, and an interesting book to read.
(Note: Some readers might have some fun knowing there is a very interesting website, created by a fan, which features this book's various Stockholm locales posted in photos.)
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The Indians gave it the name "Door" for reasons related by Holand, and the Indians were practitioners of especially brutal methods of starving, tricking and torturing each other in battles that ranged up this peninsula, and downward to the West along the Southern shores of Green Bay.
Interestingly, Ephraim was "A Venture in Communism" but now is surely more of a venture in condominiumism.
Peter Rowley, the name-giver to Rowley's Bay, turns out to have been a land speculator selling chunks of a new city to other speculators, which would be built in spite of the total lack of any farming, fishing, or timber industry. It did not work. Still, it's a charming story wedged into this peninsular history, and its part of the unique charm of this piece of land poking out into Lake Michigan that it has produced such individuated little histories tied to discrete bays running up both sides with one extra measure of history allocated to Washington Island at the top.
Importantly, this history achieves a kind of brand of tribal story telling which conveys the character of the place without becoming cutesy or even self-conscious.
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John Weitz the author of this book, is the same John Weitz that was a popular US clothing desinger in the second half of the 20th century. He was also an intelligence agent for the OSS, the forerunner of the CIA during and immediately after WWII. Ian Fleming mentioned Weitz as the prototype of his character, James Bond.
Weitz is also the father of Paul and Chris Weitz, the directors of "American Pie", and "About A Boy", and admirably not "American Pie II".
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