Library sale

Monrad tenker – Anne-Cath. Vestly (BC-candidate)
Folk flest trur ikkje på fuglar – Red. Bringsværd, Fosse og Hovland, ill. Thore Hansen
Nettopp Jensen og Tometer’n – Kjersti Wold
Nettopp Jensen og nummeret før døden – Kjersti Wold
Nettopp Jensen og de røde djevlene – Kjersti Wold
Den solbrente mammaen som blei bytta mot ti kamelar – Bjørn Sortland
Den solbrente mammaen som kledde seg naken for å bli kunst – Bjørn Sortland

Inherited from BCer
Foundation and Earth – Isaac Asimov
Forward the Foundation – Isaac Asimov

Ut å stjæle hester – Per Petterson

Blogging med tilbakevirkende kraft, april 2010.

Jeg fikk Ut å stjæle hester i en bokring på Bookcrossing og leste den sommeren 2008, på bokens bookcrossingside hadde jeg følgende å si:

Jeg ble nok en gang minnet om hvorfor jeg leser så lite norsk samtidslitteratur. Synes slett ikke dette var dårlig, men det var liksom ikke helt den store opplevelsen heller.

April, May and much of June

I swear I meant to write proper posts on some of these. However:

Police at the Funeral – Margery Allingham
Showed up in my mailbox as a sort of birthday present – bookcrossing style. A quirky and charming read and definitely an author to look out for later. I still haven’t quite decided who next to «inflict» this on, I think it takes a certain kind of reader… Hm.

Portnoy’s Complaint – Philip Roth
A little dreary, but good in its way – I think its supposed to be a little dreary, to be honest. Recognisable and not so recognisable themes of guilt and shame, religion and upbringing.

The Chronicles of Prydain – Lloyd Alexander
A reread occasioned by finding the first three books in Norwegian second-hand by chance.

Sputnik Sweetheart – Haruki Murakami
Also a bookcrossing copy, my suspicions that I’d like Murakami in novel-form was confirmed. A perfectly beautiful – though quite sinister – book, and very hard to put down once you’ve started.

Under the Duvet, Angels and The Other Side of the Story – Marian Keyes 
A three for one sale on Marian Keyes paperbacks, and these are the ones I came away with. Under the Duvet was entertaining, but possibly a little too light-hearted for my taste (even the pieces dealing with serious issues such as alchoholism somehow felt light-hearted, something Rachel’s Holiday – the novel dealing with the same issue – doesn’t). I realised, shortly after having started it, that I’ve read Angels before. Nevermind, I didn’t remember how it would all end and it was worth a reread (even if I still don’t really like the ending. Bah). The Other Side of the Story was, uhm, not quite up to Keys’ usual standard, I don’t think. I think partly it was the narrative form I didn’t like, it was slightly too disjointed to suit the overall style of the novel (or me, possibly).

The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox – Maggie O’Farrell
Received from Tonbel, who grabbed the chance to get rid of some books while I was there. Most of them ended up bookcrossed, but this one she suggested I read, and I’m glad she did. The main problem with this book was that it was at least 400 pages too short. I wanted to know more, much more, and it left me (internally, I was on the bus) shouting «But what happened next?» Not that the story is unfinished as such, just that the characters were compelling enough to make me want to read more. I think I will have to put the books O’Farrell mentions as helpful when researching on my tbr list.

I’ve probably forgotten something here, oh well.

Fretex, Ullevålsveien

White Noise – Don DeLillo
Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
The Queen of Subtleties – Suzannah Dunn
The Mammoth Book of Literary Anecdotes – Ed. Philip Gooden

Norli/Oslo Bokfestival
Nød – Are Kalvø
Den lille stygge sjokoladeboka – Simen Sætre
Kongen av Europa – Jan Kjærstad