Kirjailijakuva

Elisabeth Rynell

Teoksen Paluu tekijä

14+ teosta 175 jäsentä 9 arvostelua

Tekijän teokset

Paluu (2002) 91 kappaletta
Hohaj : roman (1997) 54 kappaletta
Hitta Hem : roman (2009) 8 kappaletta
Moll : roman (2017) 6 kappaletta
Skrivandets sinne (2013) 3 kappaletta
Veta hut : roman (1979) 3 kappaletta
Night Talks (2019) 3 kappaletta
Sjuk fågel : dikter (1988) 1 kappale
Onda dikter : 1978-80 (1980) 1 kappale
Sorgvingesång : dikter (1985) 1 kappale
Nattliga samtal : dikter (1990) 1 kappale
Öckenvandrare : dikter (1993) 1 kappale
I mina hus : dikter (2006) 1 kappale
Lyrsvit m.m. gnöl (1975) 1 kappale

Associated Works

Ice Floe : New and Selected Poems (2010) — Avustaja — 4 kappaletta

Merkitty avainsanalla

Yleistieto

Syntymäaika
1954
Sukupuoli
female
Kansalaisuus
Sweden

Jäseniä

Kirja-arvosteluja

Efter att ha läst två tidigare romaner av Elisabeth Rynell, Hohaj och Till Mervas blev jag lite besviken på denna bok. De båda andra är fantastiskt bra medans denna är ok. Språket är fint men de båda berättelserna i boken engagerar inte tillräckligt. Sedan är det ju två noveller som inte hänger ihop men har ett slags gemensamt tema. Ok och läsvärd men ändå inte i normal Rynell klass.
 
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Mats_Sigfridsson | 1 muu arvostelu | Dec 3, 2019 |
Talk about beautiful writing, this book was breathtakingly so! Rynell is a Swedish poet and novelist. To Mervas is her first novel to be translated into English, and the translation is exceptional. It’s about middle-aged Marta who suddenly receives a letter out of the blue from her first and only love, Kosti, more than twenty years after she last heard from him. It’s just a few lines saying that he’s in Mervas, and it’s signed “Your Kosti”.

The letter understandably sets off a train of emotions and memories, as Marta thinks back on her life and everything that has led her to where she is currently. It is a gut-wrenching tale, but one that needs to be savored for the refreshing lyrical prose. I loved it.… (lisätietoja)
2 ääni
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akeela | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Jan 4, 2011 |
Marta has lived a life of hardship, abuse, and self-imposed solitude. One day, seemingly out of nowhere, she receives a letter from Kosti, her one and only love. She has neither seen nor heard from him in over twenty years, and his short letter tells very little except that he is now living in Mervas, in a remote part of Sweden. This awakens long-suppressed feelings:
I knew that the letter I'd received wasn't much of a letter, but still, the few words he'd written were alive inside me ... They'd reminded me of my life and the fact that I was still living it, that I was supposed to live it. I'd forgotten that. (p. 6)

Marta quickly decides to go off in search of Kosti, but is almost immediately gripped by fear. She is forced to examine and piece together events from her past, which include witnessing her father's repeated abuse of her mother, and giving birth to a severely disabled child who later died. She tries to come to terms with how these experiences sent her into a life of isolation:
And my thoughts have not been fluffy memories or daydreams of the boy. ... It has even struck me that there are similarities between the writing I've begun and an archaeological excavation. The carefulness. You have to be so incredibly careful with the things you find down there. They may for example be positioned in a specific order in relation to one another that mustn't be changed. Or they may be fragile and crumble at the slightest touch. (p. 44)

When summer arrives, Marta is finally ready to make the journey to Mervas. Her journey is slow and careful, and as she approaches her destination she is both attracted to and repelled by Mervas. And as she makes her journey, the reader is slowly made aware of the full weight of Marta's life experiences. Elisabeth Rynell's prose is spare and yet poetic, and the emotional reveal is a bit intense. This is a very short book, but not an easy one to read. The enjoyment comes not from the characters or plot, but from Rynell's ability to convey a sense of loneliness and desperation and the promise of something better for Marta.
… (lisätietoja)
4 ääni
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lauralkeet | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Nov 26, 2010 |
Translated from the Swedish by Victoria Hagglbom

“There is a quality of precision in life, an incorruptible order that cannot be made relative. Life is relentless the same way death is. Everyone has a place in their own story with a myriad of threads running forward and backward, upward and downward, like a web. If you want to cut yourself loose, you have to cut yourself off from who you are. You can’t just switch your life for another. The details of your existence may be unbearable, but they are nevertheless wrapped up neatly and connected to each other like the threads of the web.”

Marta has been living in such a web for years, since childhood. She grew up in an unimaginably difficult home, with a father that not only abused their mother (leading to her death) but also put Marta in the unenviable position of being his “helper”. His abuse was particularly horrific: he didn’t beat Marta, as long as she didn’t interfere and try and aid her mother. What child can evaluate such a position and decide what is best? Her only tactic, to cope with the fear and her sense of disloyalty was to withdraw within herself. She became the type of woman who is completely alone, even when surrounded by others.

Her upbringing made her unable to form a normal relationship with her boyfriend , Kosti, leading him to leave her, as her neediness pushed him away. The novel begins with her alone, in the years after her only child has died. The child, whom she named Sebastian but referred to usually as ‘the boy’, had severe birth defects and she had nurtured him, alone, for years. The narrative begins with her getting a letter from Kosti, telling her that he is now in a small town in northern Sweden called “Mervas”. Her isolation has put her in a place with very little human contact, and the letter impels her to finally seek the outside world. She contemplates the idea of going to see him at Mervas.

The rest of the book is her journey: both the physical journey of locating and travelling to Mervas as well as the emotional journey of making a new life. She’s constantly second guessing herself, and reliving horrific memories of her mother’s abuse. She’s not even sure she wants to see Kosti again…so much of her life has been restricted that she has atrophied, both physically and emotionally. Throughout her journey, details of her son’s tragic death emerge, and we see how it’s nearly unimaginable that she can move on into any “normal” life.

Regarding the surprise of his letter, she says “the few words he’d written were alive inside me…they’d reminded me of my life and the fact that I was still living it, that I was supposed to live it. I’d forgotten that. I’d stayed away from that truth. And a person can actually hide inside her own life, hide from life itself within the minutiae and everyday chores, hide from herself inside herself.”

As she travels to Mervas, she’s confronted with the fear of the unknown as well as an honest fear of herself. “My thoughts moved around in the room like anxious shadow animals, sniffing and listening. I almost thought I could see them flickering over the walls. Herds of fear ran down the slopes as if they were being hunted, being egged on by the thoughts and visions spinning in my head. The terror seemed to hatch in new places all the time, one vision after another appearing in long, painful sequences.”

To Mervas is the story of her journey, one that doesn’t arrive at any simple or easy conclusion. Much of the latter half of the book is ambiguous, and the reader can arrive at more than one conclusion about Marta. The value of this story, however, is clear: people are flawed, damaged, and searching. Even without consciousness, they are searching for a way out and redemption. How Marta coped with so many situations that were beyond her control is a fascinating glimpse of the resilience of the human spirit.
… (lisätietoja)
2 ääni
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BlackSheepDances | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Sep 5, 2010 |

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Tilastot

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14
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1
Jäseniä
175
Suosituimmuussija
#122,547
Arvio (tähdet)
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Kirja-arvosteluja
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ISBN:t
36
Kielet
7

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