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2025:2

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Issue number: 2025:2

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2025:2

A special issue on city writing, featuring works by Lyra Ekström Lindbäck, Aris Fioretos, Maxim Grigoriev, Gabriella Håkansson, Uta Staiger, Hjalmar Söderberg, Elisabeth Åsbrink and more.

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

Image credit: Miguel Navarro.

Welcome to this special issue of Swedish Book Review, in which we explore city writing, in particular representations of London in contemporary Swedish literature. Curated in partnership with UCL European Institute and its interactive, multifaceted initiative Lost and Found: A European Literary Map of London, this issue shines a light on Sweden’s rich tradition of city writing, and cities as sites of exchange and transformation.  

In features, Uta Staiger, Associate Professor of European Studies at UCL and co-curator of this issue, reveals the background to the European Literary Map of London project, discussing in particular what happens when we begin to peel back layers of urban history and explore a London and a Europe of the imagination.

In translations, Aris Fioretos’s The Thin Gods, set partly in Thatcher-era London, offers an unflinching portrait of an artist and an elegant ode to an entire musical scene, while Gabriella Håkansson’s The Heretics’ Temple draws us on an immersive journey through the streets of Regency London, depicting a society juddering into the modern world.

Lyra Ekström Lindbäck’s The Bleed probes the borderlines between reality and fantasy, set against the backdrop of a palpable, pulsating city. Meanwhile, on a misty morning in 1949, a lonely housewife realises that everything has changed, but nothing is different, in Elisabeth Åsbrink’s Abandonment

In recognition of the breadth of Swedish city writing – and of London’s links to its sister cities across Europe – we have also included two excerpts that transport us to other cities and other times. In Maxim Grigoriev’s multi-award-winning Europe, a young man is enveloped by Paris’s geometry while wandering the city at night, and in Astray, Hjalmar Söderberg – the quintessential Stockholm writer of his era – describes a man’s amorous adventures through fin-de-siècle Stockholm.

We continue this Europe-wide focus with a fascinating interview series with contemporary European writers for whom place is integral in their work. In this triptych, Nisrine Mbarki Ben Ayad (the Netherlands), Tone Schunnesson (Sweden) and Iryna Shuvalova (Ukraine) generously share how they respond to the complex fabric of urban modernity, their relationships to London as a city, and the intersections of their various literary practices. 

As ever, our bumper reviews section highlights the breadth and depth of publishing in Sweden today, including reviews of sweeping historical fiction, captivating crime, bewitching children’s fiction and absorbing, intimate poetry.

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

 

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Translations

Black-and-white image of Aris Fioretos in a pinstripe suit

LATEST TRANSLATION

from The Thin Gods by Aris Fioretos

Written in the form of letters to the daughter whom he has never met, Aris Fioretos's latest novel takes us from downtown New York to Thatcher-era London, new-millennium Berlin and beyond, describing the rise and fall of an artist and musical scene. 
Translated by Tomas Tranæus.

Black and white photo of Hjalmar Söderberg from 1907.

LATEST TRANSLATION

from Astray by Hjalmar Söderberg

Hjalmar Söderberg, the quintessential Stockholm writer of his time, offers a lyrical account of a trip out to Djurgården, a largely wooded island and popular recreational area close to the city centre.
Translated by Tom Ellett.

Features

Reviews

curated and edited by Darcy Hurford

Fiction

Book cover of Andreas Grube

LATEST REVIEW

I vinet ingen sanning

No Truth in Wine by Andreas Grube is a bold, fast-paced crime novel in a completely new genre, Vino Noir, written with great flair and a genuine sense for getting the reader hooked from the first page, and just like with a good wine, wanting more and more.

Book cover of Antti Jalava

LATEST REVIEW

Asfaltblomman

Originally published in 1980 to great acclaim, Antti Jalava’s Asphalt Flower is something of a Sweden Finn classic. It views Stockholm through the eyes of Erkki, an aspiring author and second-generation immigrant from Finland.

Book cover of Jens Liljestrand

LATEST REVIEW

Befrielsen

Set on the Danish island of Bornholm in 1945, Jens Liljestrand’s Liberation is a historical crime novel that shines a light on a lesser-known part of the second world war.

Poetry

Book cover of Alva Hedlund

LATEST REVIEW

Ägt

Alva Hedlund's debut work of poetry, Owned, is an intimate and sharp exploration of the inextricability of the self and others. 

Fiction for children and teenagers

Book cover of Johan Persson

LATEST REVIEW

Ivy vs Ivy

Johan Persson's debut charts the biggest day in twelve-year-old Ivy’s life: the day she is going to enter a huge painting for her town’s autumn exhibition. But there’s one small problem. The painting is not even close to completion.

Book cover of Frida Nilsson

LATEST REVIEW

Hundägarna

Enter the strange dystopian world of The Dog Owners and its sequel The Cat Hunters, where dogs are third-class citizens on a mission to reclaim their freedom. And where the human boy Martin is on his own difficult journey to find his father.

Book cover of Frida Nilsson

LATEST REVIEW

Kattjägarna

Enter the strange dystopian world of The Dog Owners and its sequel The Cat Hunters, where dogs are third-class citizens on a mission to reclaim their freedom. And where the human boy Martin is on his own difficult journey to find his father.

Non-fiction

Book cover of Fatima Bremmer

LATEST REVIEW

Ligan

Agitating, gossiping and saving the children: A group of exceptional women journalists emerge from relative obscurity in Fatima Bremmer’s The Pioneers.

Generously supported by Swedish Literature Exchange, part of the Swedish Arts Council.

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Generously supported by UCL European Institute.

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