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Bits and bobs about my life in my lovely home, Thatchwick Cottage, Pretoria, South Africa.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Friday, 9 October '09: Seeking solitude while 'Out stealing horses'

Dominant themes in Per Petterson's striking novel are solitude and memories. Trond, a recent widower, retreats to a small cottage in the isolated forests of Norway (but within driving distance from Oslo) after the death of his wife. With his dog, Lyra, for a companion, engaged in hard physical work and in simple, uncluttered surroundings, he delves back into the past remembering the events of the summer of 1948 which he spent in similar surroundings and in close relationship with his father. Those memories spark off his reconstruction of what he had heard of the events during the Nazi occupation of Norway - events which eventually drew his father away from his wife and family and left Trond to face young adulthood and the rest of his life, fatherless. However, the most successful scene in the novel, in my view, is Trond's recollection of an outing with his mother - a single time when she rose above her hopeless situation as an abandoned wife and in which mother and son walked side by side in joyful companionship.

My two dear Norwegian friends have so often described the little wooden cottages with no running water and outside toilets in the Norwegian countryside which families hold dear as getaways both in winter and summer. I feel that I can see the wood stove, the scrubbed floorboards, the gaslamp, a brightly coloured woolen blanket tossed on the bunk and the stout door barricading the snow and cold outside. At present as the year hurtles to its closure, I wish I could escape to solitude in a hut in the snowy woods of Norway - just for a day or two!

Oh, and the enigmatric title? That refers both to boyish pranks and the code name given to 'outlawed' activities of the Norwegian resistance during WWII.

6 comments:

Tess Kincaid said...

I could see this being made into a beautiful film with perhaps a young Max Von Sydow as the lead. Lovely review, Eleanor.

Carol Murdock said...

Great review Eleanor! It sounds like a great read to me! I just read where Norway was chosen as the best place to live. xoxo

SmilingSally said...

Your review reads like poetry!

Vicki Lane said...

Wonderful review -- I've heard other good things about this book but haven't yet read it.

The Quintessential Magpie said...

I can definitely see this being a film. But I usually like the novel better. Thanks for the review.

Anonymous said...

This book sounds wonderful. I'm going to try to get it. By the way, it is snowing in Minnesota, too. Barb