REVIEW
Breven från Maresi
With Maresi Red Mantle Maria Turtschaninoff confirms her status as an internationally renowned author of fantasy.
REVIEW
När hundarna kommer
Jessica Schiefauer’s thorough examination of neo-Nazis, hate crime and homoeroticism resists simplification and reminds us of the thin line we all tread when we choose how to treat each other.
REVIEW
Fågelbarn
As in Alejandro Almenábar’s 2001 film ‘The Others’, the encounters with the dead challenge and unsettle our perception of reality.
REVIEW
Indianlekar
The setting, the ‘Indian village’ – a nickname for the flats belonging to the local Volvo factory – symbolises the democratic dream of providing a decent life for all workers. But the dream of equality is trashed by the brokenness of those who live there today.
REVIEW
Fenixelden. Drottning Kristina som alchemist
Åkerman’s book opens up new perspectives on the queen who had admired Alexander the Great since she was a child, who refused to marry, and who sought to develop intellectual networks abroad.
REVIEW
Du vet väl om att du är värdefull
Among beauty bags and wine bottles lingers a refreshing attitude of acceptance and hope.
REVIEW
Lex bok
Kadefors’s portrait of a girl outsider in baggy clothes and hoodies, who manages to become a blog fashion icon, raises questions about who has the authority to write about young people.
REVIEW
Du & jag
In her sensitive and engaging language, von Bredow lets her protagonist ponder how appearances affect all our relations. Why does everybody seem so false? How can Andreas’s father cheat and pretend everything is normal at home?
REVIEW
Fulast i världen
The theme of social class, which has emerged so strongly in works by Susanna Alakoski and Eija Hetekivi-Ohlsson, is to the fore in Olsson’s novel, too.
Reviews highlights series
Books for Young Adults
A curated list of outstanding fiction for young adults, as reviewed in Swedish Book Review.
REVIEW
De tar allt ifrån mig
In They’re Taking Everything Away from Me, An intense YA novel set in Northern Sweden, Linda Jones describes Frida, a fifteen-year-old coming of age in a community that is falling apart.
INTERVIEW
‘It Takes a Village to Raise Good Children’s Literature and Critique’
Researchers and critics Maria Lassén-Seger and Mia Österlund speak to Swedish Book Review about Finland-Swedish children’s literature and the art of literary criticism
REVIEW
Fjollornas fest
In Sissy, Jonas Gardell writes another collective literary testimony from Stockholm’s gay community. This time, the sissies – said to be the most despised even by the gay community – take centre stage.