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2023:2

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Issue number: 2023:2

2023:2

Featuring works by Majgull Axelsson, Göran Bergengren, Martin Björklind, Thella Johnson, Marit Kapla, Nora Khalil and more.

Editor: Alex Fleming
Reviews Editor: Darcy Hurford
Advisory Editors: Deborah Bragan-Turner, Sarah Death, Fiona Graham, Paul Norlen and Linda Schenck
Social Media: Sophie Ruthven
New Books: Alice E Olsson

Photo by Aedrian on Unsplash.

Welcome to this latest issue of Swedish Book Review, which is dedicated to the theme of ‘Unseen Worlds’. Drawing us from parallel realms to marginalised spaces and the landscapes of the mind, the works presented in this issue all bear out the idea of literature – particularly literature in translation – as a window onto new, hidden or previously unexplored worlds.

In translations, Thella Johnson’s enthralling debut Peace offers a vivid retelling of a turbulent family history, while in The Flight of the Swallows Majgull Axelsson steps inside the mind of a scarred young woman trying to take control of her future. 

Marrying prose poetry and reportage, Marit Kapla’s polyphonic Love in Swedish explores the conditions of love in our time, while nature writer par excellence Göran Bergengren offers a meditative essay on the dance of the bees.

Nora Khalil’s bittersweet, warmly narrated Yani follows a close-knit group of teens through joy and hardship, and Martin Björklind’s reality-bending thriller A Third World takes us on a race to prevent looming catastrophe.

In features, Tom Geddes celebrates the life of Eivor Martinus, a writer and prolific translator of literature and drama who made valuable contributions to both SELTA and Swedish Book Review. And, in the centenary year of Stig Dagerman’s birth, Bengt Söderhäll explores Dagerman’s lasting legacy and impact, and some of the events taking place to mark this anniversary.

As ever, our reviews section features an array of new Swedish-language books from across the publishing scene, including risk-taking experimental texts, topsy-turvy picture books and urgent depictions of the here and now.

This is just the first of two exciting issues that we have in store for you this autumn. Look out for our special issue dedicated to Finland-Swedish literature coming later this October.

We would like extend our sincere thanks to Swedish Literature Exchange for their support in producing this issue. We hope that you enjoy reading it.

Translations

Young woman wearing peach-coloured hijab and a pink jacket smiles at the camera in front of yellow building.

TRANSLATED EXTRACT

from Yani by Nora Khalil

In her August-Prize-nominated Yani, Nora Khalil tells a collective coming-of-age story about alienation and belonging among a close-knit group of friends in suburban Stockholm.
Translated by Catherine Venner.

Features

Reviews

curated and edited by Darcy Hurford

Literary fiction

book cover of Inger Edelfeldt

REVIEW

De som ger sig av

Inger Edelfeldt's Scheherazade-like sequence for today’s fantasy fans weaves an unsettling tale of suppression of freedom in multiple worlds and provides a pithy commentary on the mechanics of storytelling in the process.

Book cover of Johanna Frid

REVIEW

Haralds mamma

Johanna Frid´s novel Harald’s Mother charts a difficult relationship between a mother and her daughter-in-law. It is a funny but at the same time deeply poignant take on love, family and relationships. A perfect read for book club discussions.

Book cover of Sara Gordan

REVIEW

Natten

Sara Gordan’s The Night was received with unanimous, overwhelmingly warm praise for her unique style of novelistic autobiography that focuses on a troubled, loving parenthood.

Book cover of Maxim Grigoriev

REVIEW

Regnet

Stylistically breathtaking, Maxim Grigoriev’s The Rain is a hypnotic ode to a city being hollowed by gentrification, as told through the fragmented conversations of a young group of residents.

Book cover of Mikael Yvesand

REVIEW

Häng City

Luleå, northern Sweden, 1999. Summer is just beginning, and for three boys on the edge of teenagerdom, long months of freedom beckon. In Mikael Yvesand's Hang City adventure is always round the corner – and sometimes right under your nose. If you can see that far.

Thrillers/Crime

Book cover of Christoffer Carlsson

REVIEW

Levande och döda

An excellent whodunnit as well as a sharp social and psychological drama about peoples’ lives, loves and unavoidable tragedies, The Living and the Dead shows Christoffer Carlsson on home ground in Halland.

book cover of Peter Kadhammar

REVIEW

Maos Hibiskus

Mao’s Hibiscus is a story of a decades’ long friendship between former Maoists, cemented by the obligation to look after a suitcase of money. They eventually invest the money, but their investment has fatal consequences, and everything points to the involvement of the Russian secret services.

Fiction for children and teenagers

Book cover of Lotta Geffenblad

REVIEW

Tora och Tytte planterar

In Lotta Geffenblad’s life-affirming and humorous picturebooks about the lovably odd couple Tora and Tytte, size does not matter if you care for one another. Together the couple explores everyday chores with unexpected, hilarious results and a deep sense of the small pleasures of everyday life.

Book cover of Lotta Geffenblad

REVIEW

Tora och Tytte motionerar

In Lotta Geffenblad’s life-affirming and humorous picturebooks about the lovably odd couple Tora and Tytte, size does not matter if you care for one another. Together the couple explores everyday chores with unexpected, hilarious results and a deep sense of the small pleasures of everyday life.

Book cover of Maria Hellbom

REVIEW

Älgkungen

In Maria Hellbom’s many-layered, enchanting children’s fantasy novels, two pre-teen protagonists team up with age-old, local mythical creatures and animals in order to save their rural community, its people, forests and animals from fire and exploitation.

Book cover of Maria Hellbom

REVIEW

Pärlbäraren

In Maria Hellbom’s many-layered, enchanting children’s fantasy novels, two pre-teen protagonists team up with age-old, local mythical creatures and animals in order to save their rural community, its people, forests and animals from fire and exploitation.

Non-fiction

Book cover of Nina Ulmaja

REVIEW

En annan Edith

Best known for her poetry, Edith Södergran (1892 – 1923) also left a substantial body of photography. In Another Edith, award-winning book designer Nina Ulmaja analyses some of these photos and links them to Södergran’s biography – and her own.

Generously supported by the Swedish Literature Exchange at the Swedish Arts Council.


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