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Nominated for the Icelandic Literary Prize, Quake: A Novel is a
haunting novel-in-translation about Saga, a woman who comes to
after an epileptic seizure on a sidewalk along busy Miklabraut
Street. Her three-year-old son is gone. The last thing she
remembers is a double-decker bus that no one else can confirm
seeing. Over the following days, Saga's mind is beset by memories
and doubts. What happened before her seizure? Who can she trust?
And how can she make any sense of her emotions when her memory is
so fragmented? Hailed as Audur Jonsdottir's "best-written novel so
far," Quake is a shocking and revelatory exploration of the blurred
lines between fact and fiction, reality and imagination, and where
mother ends and child begins.
Iceland is a land of stories; from the epic sagas of its mythic
past, to its claim today of being home to more writers, more
published books and more avid readers, per head, than anywhere in
the world. As its capital (and indeed only city), Reykjavik has
long been an inspiration for these stories. But, as this collection
demonstrates, this fishing-village-turned-metropolis at the
farthest fringe of Europe has been both revered and reviled by
Icelanders over the years. The tension between the city and the
surrounding countryside, its rural past and urban present, weaves
its way through The Book of Reykjavik, forming an outline of a
fragmented city marked by both contradiction and creativity.
Includes a foreword written by award-winning Icelandic author Sjon.
Translated from the Icelandic by Victoria Cribb, Philip Roughton,
Lytton Smith, Meg Matich and Larissa Kyzer. Published with the
support of the Icelandic Literature Center.
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