slight spoilers
Literary fiction, translated from Swedish, it follows a young journalist Emelie, who decides to go camping in the countryside after suffering a burnout; she stumbles across a community, the Colony, of seven people living off the grid.
This was overall a very interesting read.
The narrative style was quite original, with a whimsical tone, surrealistic atmosphere, a chaotic pacing. The writing was quite good, the author’s rendering each character clearly, sometimes through diary entries. There was some beautiful turns of phrases throughout the story, punctuating some humorous, awkward and light hearted moments but also emotional and very hard ones to read (check the trigger warnings).
The book explored quite successfully various thematics on power, manipulation, social conformity, isolation, community, misogyny, patriarchy, capitalism, agency.
So pacing wise, as I said this was chaotic. It was more character driven than I first expected. Each member of the Colony had multiple flashbacks. There were interesting, in that they humanised the colony by fleshing them out as complete and complex human beings, with negative and positive traits, the horrible and joyful events they experienced .
However it felt a bit too long at times and the plot in the present moved a bit too quickly especially regarding how each member of the colony ended up. Some conflicts were resolved too quickly and some of the character’s problems brushed off too quickly.
I was surprised that Emelie never feel like the main character, more like the catalyst to frame the story and make the plot evolve. I wanted to see more of her story especially how she ended up.
Overall an engaging first novel by this author and I’ll be on the look out for the for her next books.
slight spoilers
Literary fiction, translated from Swedish, it follows a young journalist Emelie, who decides to go camping in the countryside after suffering a burnout; she stumbles across a community, the Colony, of seven people living off the grid.
This was overall a very interesting read.
The narrative style was quite original, with a whimsical tone, surrealistic atmosphere, a chaotic pacing. The writing was quite good, the author’s rendering each character clearly, sometimes through diary entries. There was some beautiful turns of phrases throughout the story, punctuating some humorous, awkward and light hearted moments but also emotional and very hard ones to read (check the trigger warnings).
The book explored quite successfully various thematics on power, manipulation, social conformity, isolation, community, misogyny, patriarchy, capitalism, agency.
So pacing wise, as I said this was chaotic. It was more character driven than I first expected. Each member of the Colony had multiple flashbacks. There were interesting, in that they humanised the colony by fleshing them out as complete and complex human beings, with negative and positive traits, the horrible and joyful events they experienced .
However it felt a bit too long at times and the plot in the present moved a bit too quickly especially regarding how each member of the colony ended up. Some conflicts were resolved too quickly and some of the character’s problems brushed off too quickly.
I was surprised that Emelie never feel like the main character, more like the catalyst to frame the story and make the plot evolve. I wanted to see more of her story especially how she ended up.
Overall an engaging first novel by this author and I’ll be on the look out for the for her next books.