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House of Day, House of Night
House of Day, House of Night | Olga Tokarczuk
4 posts | 9 read | 10 to read
The English translation of the prize-winning international bestsellerWinner of the Gunter Grass Prize Nowa Ruda is a small town in Silesia, an area that has been a part of Poland, Germany, and the former Czechoslovakia in the past. When the narrator moves into the area, she and discovers everyone-and everything-has its own story. With the help of Marta, her enigmatic neighbor, the narrator accumulates these stories, tracing the history of Nowa Ruda from the founding of the town to the lives of its saints, from the caller who wins the radio quiz every day to the tale of the man who causes international tension when he dies on the border, one leg on the Polish side, the other on the Czech side. Each of the stories represents a brick and they interlock to reveal the immense monument that is the town. What emerges is the message that the history of any place--no matter how humble--is limitless, that by describing or digging at the roots of a life, a house, or a neighborhood, one can see all the connections, not only with one's self and one's dreams but also with all of the universe. Richly imagined, weaving in anecdote with recipes and gossip, Tokarczuk's novel is an epic of a small place. Since its original publication in 1998 it has remained a bestseller in Poland. "House of Day, House of Night" is the English-language debut of one of Europe's best young writers.
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Jari-chan
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Even though it's not my favorite book by Tokarczuk, it is still a very takarzuk-y book. It has all her elements: complicated characters, nature, history, magic, intertwined stories. Those stories show us that we all belong together somehow, that we all are connected. Even if it's only a tiny string. It's a slow book, like a fresh rainy afternoon in the summer. Actually, you can hear the rain hitting the leaves.

#BacklistReadathon @Clwojick

30 likes2 comments
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Simona
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Pickpick

Similar atmosphere as in Drive Your Plow ..., but this is hard to describe plotless story. Vignettes, sets in the present and past, are focused on the small events and (mainly) eccentric characters in rural village on the border between Poland and Germany. Poignant tale spiced with dark humour and with exceptional prose - smooth like butter.

Librarybelle Smooth like butter - good description! 5y
See All 14 Comments
BarbaraBB I loved Plow but I don‘t like plotless. I do love smooth though... what to do 😉?! 5y
Cinfhen Sounds interesting 5y
Simona @BarbaraBB Read it😘 So far I have read four books by her and Drive Your Plow is the least favourite of mine... 5y
BarbaraBB Okay! You‘ve convinced me. Should I read this one or do you recommend another? 5y
Simona @BarbaraBB My favourite, so far, is Books of Jacob - history novel based on true events, I don‘t know if it is already translated (English publishing date must be in April if I remember correctly). I really like her prose and her Slovenian translator does excellent job. 5y
BarbaraBB I remember you mentioning that one before. I am going to check when/if there‘s a translation in English or Dutch. Thanks! 5y
BarbaraBB Yes there is! In Dutch! 5y
Simona @BarbaraBB For last year I have only three absolutely favourite books on my list and one of the them was 5y
BarbaraBB It is 960 pages?! 5y
Simona @BarbaraBB Maybe you should try to read Slovenian edition ... our translation have only 912 pages 😜 5y
BarbaraBB 😂😂 5y
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Christoffer
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Pickpick

This book is wrought from masterful quality. The episodic nature is inviting and intriguing, and the inventive quality of so many stories and personages makes it fresh on every page. I enjoyed it throughout.

And yet I felt somewhat held at arm‘s length. Maybe the lack of a singular narrative? Maybe how it felt too perfectly themed, a touch overly crafted? Let‘s blame that on my fondness for the roughly hewn. She‘s the one who won the Nobel.

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Tove_Reads
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On to #Poland #readingtheworld I love the translator‘s note: “readers are advised that some of the recipes in this book should carry the health warning ‘Don‘t try this at home!‘. 😃

Cathythoughts I wonder what‘s in those recipes 😳 6y
Tove_Reads @Cathythoughts So far I‘ve only seen a few. A bit on the heavy side, countryside food. 6y
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