Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Voices From Chernobyl
Voices From Chernobyl | Ingrid Storholmen
3 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
Winner of the Sult Prize 2010 Nominated for the 2009 Critics' Prize Nominated for the 2009 Brage Award Nominated for the 2009 Youth Critics' Prize Chernobyl, 26 April 1986. Things were ruined overnight in that quiet town of Ukraine. An experiment to produce electricity from the residual energy in the steam generator of Reactor Four at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station went horribly wrong, bringing on an explosion that blew away the reactor's roof and set afire the graphite in its core. The blaze lasted several days, casting huge quantities of radioactivity a thousand metres up into the atmosphere. And it was a long time before the local people were evacuated. This is the story of what came after. What happened to the people of Chernobyl? How did innocuous atoms -which make all things, even us - connive to unleash a destruction so vicious that there was little left to be salvaged? Did the world learn any lessons from the tragedy? Told in the voices of many victims, this elegiac novel recounts how their bodies, lives and loves, realities and memories were distorted forever, and how the very air around them was irrevocably changed.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
AnneCecilie
Voices From Chernobyl | Ingrid Storholmen
post image

Just a random page from the book Bloddråpetall (Blood Drop Number) to illustrate how the story is told.

You have two of the villagers, Vigdis and Bente, telling their story.
The sentences in italics is from the clay race
And in small numbers statistics on mainly mental health

Leniverse That looks like a tough read 5d
Jari-chan The part about sickness is pretty intense, if I translated it right. 4d
AnneCecilie @Jari-chan You probably did. It says something in the lines of “mental disorders are the predominantly sickness reason among adults in working age” 4d
34 likes3 comments
review
AnneCecilie
Voices From Chernobyl | Ingrid Storholmen
post image
Pickpick

Tagging another of this author‘s books. The pictured is her latest trans. To Blood Drop Numbers

A book about disease starting in 2017. We meet different people in a small Norwegian village as they tell us about what is going on in their life. As the years progress things change, people get sick and some die.

And in the background lurks the trauma from the big clay race a couple of generations before almost extinguishing the entire village.

Leniverse Clay race? Do you mean clay/quicksand landslide? 5d
AnneCecilie @Leniverse Probably, that it was came up when I googled the translation 5d
Leniverse Proof that Google can't be trusted 😂 5d
IriDas Clay race kinda fits for quicksand landslide. But, yeah, google translate can be nuts. 4d
37 likes1 stack add4 comments
blurb
AnneCecilie
Voices From Chernobyl | Ingrid Storholmen
post image

Tagging the only book by this author in the database, I‘m currently reading her latest Bloddråpetall (Blod Prop Number)

When suddenly, out of nowhere, there‘s a reference to a trilogy that you‘re reading and just finished the first book, Kristin Lavransdatter - The Wreath.

“When where you happiest, Erlend Nikolausson? - I don‘t know when or where, but I know I was with Kristin.”