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258 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2003
"You wonder whether that is how we get to be after living alone for a long time, that in the middle of a train of thought we start talking out loud, that the difference between talking and not talking is slowly wiped out".I read the book feeling a slight sense of humour and a sense of innocence. Trond is a very endearing person where you know, how he sees the world, and how the world sees him, do not align. It is a well-balanced story with incidents that are fun and jovial, and there are tragic events that he deals with from his family, his friend, his father and his neighbours.
“Out stealing horses,� serves as both the announcement of an adolescent prank and a password for the dangerous activity of the resistance.
Trond's mother’s brothers, twins, come to be known as the one who was shot by the Gestapo and the one who was not shot by the Gestapo. Another twin, a child, is shot by accident in very different circumstances.
There are two father's - Jon's and Trond's.
Trond and Lars both live in small cottages with only dogs for companions.
There is a mirroring of past and present and youth and age.
“Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show.� —David Copperfield, CHARLES DICKENS
“We were supposed to be invisible down here, as far as people were concerned, but that didn’t mean we were unfree. We didn’t have to row ashore; we could just sit on the boat and watch what was happening without being involved ourselves.�
“In the course of time, I discovered that there was a difference between being able to talk about things and being able to express them.�
“Sometimes it’s better to put important things in writing. That way, they cannot be forgotten, no matter what.�
One of my many horrors is to become the man with the frayed jacket and unfastened fly standing at the Co-Op counter with egg on his shirt and more too because the mirror in the hall has given up the ghost. A shipwrecked man without an anchor in the world except in his own liquid thoughts where time has lost its sequence.Within the bounds of our circumstances, we are free to choose our fate, and this book suggests several: The unmoored man described above, or a family man who regrets all the chances he's missed, or the adulterer who somehow believes this will be the partner who puts an end to the pattern.