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Per Petterson

    July 18, 1952

    Per Petterson is celebrated for his profound exploration of the human psyche and the intricacies of relationships. His works often delve into themes of loss, memory, and the search for identity, characterized by a powerful realist style and a focus on the inner lives of his characters. Petterson masterfully captures the quiet moments and everyday struggles that shape human destinies, with prose that resonates with a deep understanding of human vulnerability.

    Per Petterson
    Nicht mit mir
    Men in My Situation
    Ashes in my mouth, sand in my shoes
    Out Stealing Horses
    To Siberia
    It's Fine by Me
    • On his first day of school, a teacher welcomes Audun to the class by asking him to describe his former life in the country. But there are stories about his family he would prefer to keep to himself, such as the weeks he spent living in a couple of cardboard boxes, and the day of his little brother's birth, when his drunken father fired three shots into the ceiling. So he refuses to talk and refuses to take off his sunglasses. In his late teens Audun is the only one of his family who remains with his mother in their home in a working-class district of Oslo. He delivers newspapers when he is not in school and talks for hours about Jack London and Ernest Hemingway with his best friend Arvid. But he's not sure that school is the right path for him, feeling that life holds other possibilities.

      It's Fine by Me
    • To Siberia

      A Novel

      • 245 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      3.7(122)Add rating

      I was fourteen and a half when the Germans came. On that 9th April we woke to the roar of aeroplanes swooping so low over the roofs of the town that we could see the black iron crosses painted on the underside of their wings when we leaned out of the windows and looked up. In this exquisite novel, readers will find the crystalline prose and depth of feeling they adored in Out Stealing Horses , a literary sensation of 2007. A brother and sister are forced ever more closely together after the suicide of their grandfather. Their parents' neglect leaves them wandering the streets of their small Danish village. The sister dreams of escaping to Siberia, but it seems increasingly distant as she helplessly watches her brother become more and more involved in resisting the Nazis.

      To Siberia
    • Out Stealing Horses

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      3.8(2065)Add rating

      In 1948, when he is fifteen, Trond spends a summer in the country with his father. The events - the accidental death of a child, his best friend's feelings of guilt and eventual disappearance, his father's decision to leave the family for another woman - will change his life forever. An early morning adventure out stealing horses leaves Trond bruised and puzzled by his friend Jon's sudden breakdown. The tragedy which lies behind this scene becomes the catalyst for the two boys' families gradually to fall apart. As a 67-year-old man, and following the death of his wife, Trond has moved to an isolated part of Norway to live in solitude. But a chance encounter with a character from the fateful summer of 1948 brings the painful memories of that year flooding back, and will leave Trond even more convinced of his decision to end his days alone.

      Out Stealing Horses
    • Ashes in my mouth, sand in my shoes

      • 118 pages
      • 5 hours of reading
      3.6(432)Add rating

      Per Petterson masters the art of writing simply of big subjects, and the stories in this collection - his debut, published in English for the first time - are beautiful tales of growing up in all its complexity, its wonders and confusions. Arvid Jansen is six years old and lives on the outskirts of Oslo. It's the early 60s, and his father works in a shoe factory; his Danish mother works as a cleaner. Arvid wets his bed at night and has nightmares about crocodiles, but slowly begins to piece the world together. His grandfather dies and he cries on seeing a photograph of his mother as a young woman - learning about the passing of time and growing old; and the world opens up to him when a teacher at his school says he and his fellow pupils must pray to God over the looming nuclear war.

      Ashes in my mouth, sand in my shoes
    • A major new novel from the author of the international bestseller Out Stealing Horses. Men in My Situation is a tender, scintillating portrait of grief, fatherhood and a life nearly going to pieces. In 1992 Arvid Jansen is thirty-eight and divorced. Turid has left with their three girls, slipping into her young, exuberant crowd of friends - the colourful - and a new house with no trace of their previous life together. More than a year has passed since the tragic accident that took his parents and two of his brothers. Existence has become a question of holding on to a few firm things. Loud, smoky bars, whisky, records, company for the night and taxis home. Or driving his Mazda into the stunning, solitary landscape outside of Oslo, sleeping in the car when his bed is an impossible place to be, craving a connection that is always just beyond reach. At some point, the girls decide against weekend visits with their dad. Arvid suspects that his eldest daughter, Vigdis, sees what kind of a man he really is. Adrift and inept, paralysed by grief. And maybe she's right to keep her distance from his lonely life. Is there any redemption for a man in his situation? When Arvid has lost or been left by all those dear to him and feels his life unravelling, perhaps there is still a way forward.

      Men in My Situation
    • Früher waren Jim und Tommy unzertrennlich. Jim, der Gymnasiast, wuchs bei seiner frommen Mutter ziemlich wohlbehütet auf. Tommy lebte bei einem Pflegevater und arbeitete in der Sägemühle. Nun treffen sie einander nach über dreißig Jahren wieder: Tommy hat es in der Finanzbranche zu Wohlstand gebracht, aber der Job ist ihm zuwider. Jim ist Bibliothekar geworden, seit einem Jahr jedoch ist er krankgeschrieben und angelt am Fluss. In unvergesslichen Szenen schildert Petterson die Freundschaft der beiden Männer, ihre Frauen, ihre Einsamkeit, ihre Wut und ihren Trotz. Wie kein anderer erzählt der vielfach ausgezeichnete Autor aus Norwegen vom ganz Alltäglichen auf ganz ungewöhnliche Weise.

      Nicht mit mir
    • Mit einem waghalsigen Sprung erobern Arvid und sein älterer Bruder eine gefährlich schwankende Eisscholle, balancieren sich aus und lassen sich aufs offene Meer treiben. Am Ufer steht ihr Vater und ruft sie vergeblich zurück. Dies ist eine der Kindheitserinnerungen, die Arvid immer wieder heimsuchen. Fast sechs Jahre ist es her, dass Arvids Vater bei einem Schiffsbrand ums Leben kam, zusammen mit seiner Frau und den beiden jüngsten Söhnen. Nur Arvid, 43, Schriftsteller, und sein älterer Bruder sind übrig geblieben. Doch die alte Vertrautheit zwischen den Geschwistern will sich nicht wieder einstellen, zu sehr sind sie in ihrer Trauer gefangen. Erst nach und nach lernt Arvid, mit den ambivalenten Gefühlen gegenüber seinem Vater umzugehen, der in fast allem sein Gegenstück war. Schicht um Schicht legt er die Geschichte seiner Familie frei und erfährt dabei, dass auch der Vater zu etwas imstande war, das er ihm nie zugetraut hätte: Leidenschaft und tiefe Verzweiflung.

      Im Kielwasser
    • November 1989. Die Mauer ist gefallen, eine Ära geht zu Ende. Arvids Mutter erfährt, dass sie an Krebs erkrankt ist. Ohne ihren Mann und ihre erwachsenen Söhne möchte sie noch einmal in ihre Heimat, ins Ferienhaus auf Jütland. Arvid, der selber gerade ein großes Problem hat, er steht unmittelbar vor seiner Scheidung, fährt ihr einfach nach. Das Verhältnis zwischen Mutter und Sohn war nie gut, Arvid war das Sorgenkind, ungeschickt und querköpfig. Nur in einer Sache fühlen sie sich verbunden, durch die Leidenschaft für Filme und Bücher. In raffinierten Rückblenden erzählt Per Petterson diese Geschichte von Mutter und Sohn, Alter und Jugend, Kränkungen und nachgetragener Liebe. Per Petterson evoziert mit wenigen Worten ganze Welten.

      Ich verfluche den Fluss der Zeit
    • Twee wegen - druk 1

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Twee mannen komen elkaar tegen op een brug. Er volgt een ongemakkelijk gesprek: Tommy en Jim waren vroeger vrienden, maar hebben elkaar al vijfendertig jaar niet meer gezien. Door deze toevallige ontmoeting komen veel herinneringen uit hun jeugd boven, toen ze allebei opgroeiden in gebroken gezinnen en kracht putten uit hun vriendschap. Tommy en Jim zijn ieder hun eigen weg gegaan, maar kunnen niet aan hun veelbewogen verleden ontsnappen.

      Twee wegen - druk 1