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#swedishliterature
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Suet624
Carnality: A Novel | Lina Wolff
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I can think of a few folks who fit this definition. 😤

TrishB Definitely. 5d
Jeg Me too. 4d
40 likes2 comments
blurb
ShyBookOwl
Harbor | John Ajvide Lindqvist
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My #BookScavengerHunt find for #Cold
Warning: This horror author is NOT for the faint of heart!

#HauntedShelf #BlackCatCrew @BookwormAHN 16pts

BookwormAHN 🖤🐈‍⬛🖤 1mo
32 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
Hooked_on_books
Aednan | Linnea Axelsson
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Mehso-so

This look at Sami people in Sweden fighting for their native grazing land and rights is fine but ultimately unmemorable. It‘s slim (the audio is less than 3 hours) and I feel like it was a little lacking in content. I found The End of Drum-Time to be a more effective look at the Sami experience.

NBA shortlist, translated literature

review
KMCRamsek
Welcome to America | Linda Bostrm Knausgrd
Pickpick

‘My dad‘s dead, did I mention that? It‘s my fault. I prayed out loud to God for him to die and he did.‘
10/10

review
AnneCecilie
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Pickpick

Not the tagged book, but Khemiri‘s latest novel is not in the database

Wow! Just WOW! This book is amazing. About 3 sisters, Ina, Evelyn and Anastasia. The book starts as the world is heading into a new millennium and the sisters are in their 20s and we follow them until after the pandemic.

Three‘s also a storyteller, telling us about the sisters in the 90s and how he came in contact with them.

A book about family, absent parents and kids

AnneCecilie who take on too much responsibility too soon, about mental illness and how that affects the family. Khemiri is part Swedish and part Tunisian, and all the main characters in this novel is that as well, so it‘s about how that effect you. We watch them as life change and change again. (edited) 5mo
60 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
kspenmoll
What We Owe | Golnaz Hashemzadeh Bonde
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Pickpick

When I started this book,I immediately wanted to bail.Nahid,the narrator has just been diagnosed with cancer.She came across to me as a despicable person-angry,nasty, to her daughter & those around her.But something pulled me back into her story & I am so thankful I responded to that pull.As her life story slowly emerged,as she struggled to understand her journey herself & cope with her diagnosis,I began to feel empathy.A refugee of the Iranian🔽

kspenmoll 🔼 Revolution,she threw herself into her role with idealism & little understanding. She was marked as traitor to the Iranian regime for life.So she& her husband immigrated to Sweden.The trauma of herself as a refugee,& her compounded losses:family,culture,roots,country, never left her.She cannot get over all these losses- she states starkly:”You are condemned and your children are too. Everything remains, and everything is passed down.”🔽 (edited) 7mo
kspenmoll 🔼 Her statement reminds me of The Postcard & the idea that the Holocaust & its resulting trauma stays in survivors‘ body cells for generations. (edited) 7mo
66 likes2 stack adds2 comments
blurb
AshleyHoss820
Aprilheks | Majgull Axelsson
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Not me, thinking I was ahead of the game and had already posted my #BookSpin list only to realize I‘m a month behind…🙄😂💀 Sheesh. April already!? Well, the list is the same anyway, so no harm no foul! I‘m excited to pick the books to fit the spins!

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 8mo
25 likes2 comments
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Anna40
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Pickpick

A collection of thoughts on disease, death, nature, art. A collection of memories (childhood, living and travelling abroad, love relationships). There‘s also a recurring warning not to bequeath nuclear waste to future generations. Mankell was a man of the highest integrity, one of the finest (crime) writers which shines through in this wonderful book. It was a joy to read and makes me want to explore everything he published.

23 likes1 stack add
review
Anna40
An Event in Autumn | Henning Mankell
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Pickpick

Wallander found a farmhouse in the country he likes & is about to make an offer to buy it when he stumbles over a human hand in the backyard. The hand belonged to a woman in her fifties but her identity is unknown. Wallander & his colleagues now have to find out who the woman was & who killed her. The fact that she died after WW2 makes that more difficult. The story also focuses on Wallander‘s thoughts on ageing & retirement, end of life.

kspenmoll Wonderful review! 8mo
Anna40 @kspenmoll thank you 💕 8mo
28 likes1 stack add2 comments