Apr. 21st, 2021

Book meme

Apr. 21st, 2021 05:31 pm
scripsi: (Default)
8. A book that feels like it was written just for you

Faunen (The Faun) by Anna-Karin Palm. This book found me when I was 21, and it really felt like the author had been thinking of me when she wrote it.

It’s really three stories in this book, each written in different styles. First, there is the story about Amelia, author of romance novels in 1880s London. One day she finds a faun in her writing room who announces he is very vexed with her. It turns out he is not pleased with the book she is writing about Medieval Eleanor, because she is not describing what really happened. This is the start of a series of events that turns Amelia’s life upside down.

There is the diary of a young Swedish woman in contemporary London. She becomes obsessed with a painting of a faun and woman at the National Gallery, and throughout the diary she returns to it several times, interpreting it differently. She’s haunted by something she did to her best friend, and she also writes about the man who she can’t keep from running to as soon as he wriggles a finger.

And there is the story the faun tells Amelia, about Eleanor and the unicorn. This is the shortest story, written in a very stylized language. It’s more like a fairy tale, and you don’t get as close to Eleanor as you do to Amelia and the diary writer.

There are several themes in this book; friendship, betrayal, and creativity. Both Amelia and the diary-writer allow a man to shape their narratives, and the faun also shapes Eleanor’s life in the story he narrates to Amelia. And as a direct result of the faun intruding on Amelia’s life the most important relationship in her life, that to her best friend, gets into jeopardy.

It’s also about responsibility. When amelia takes back the control of her life, her narrative, she not only empowers herself, she also mends it, and she also saves Eleanor. And when the diary-writer realizes that his betrayal isn’t a betrayal; that she has to allow her friend to take responsibility for her own life, she can also break free from the hold of her lover and shape her life in a way that úits her.

When I read this book I had just broken up a very toxic relationship with a man who was very jealous and controlling. And I was also struggling with a friendship. Faunen came to me just when I needed them most, and it was very helpful. It’s also written in a style that suited me, and it’s very visual, which I am as well. And the bits about Stockholm was so very familiar; the same Stockholm I love din, visiting the same places and bars I went to.

I also loved her next novel Målarens döttrar (The Painter’s Daughters) which also is a novel with more than one timeline. One contemporary where Swedish Maria travels with her brother to England in search of their father, an artist. And then there is English Laura 100 years earlier who lives with her artist father. As with Faunen it centres around women and female identity. Palm’s books are translated to German, Dutch, French, Norwegian, Danish, Spanish, Polish, and Icelandish, but unfortunately not English.



All the questions:

Read more... )

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Profile

scripsi: (Default)
scripsi

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
456 789 10
111213 14 151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Page Summary

Style Credit

Page generated May. 17th, 2025 11:03 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
OSZAR »