In the Stories of Kjell Askildsen, Stasis and Revelation Intertwine
Archipelago, 2021
The narratives of Everything Like Before, only the second book by the Norwegian writer to be published in the US, bend toward the seemingly mundane, then sting with an act that might (or might not) change everything.
Kjell Askildsen, winner of the Swedish Academy’s Nordic Prize in 2009, is a consummate chronicler of contradictory, quicksilver emotions and impulses. There is in his work a careful calibration of his characters inner lives, of small dramas in no way empty of incident, whose ultimate crux is the desultory, dangerous weight of time: time is too slow, nothing ever changes, time doesn’t matter, then it is too abrupt, it’s unbearably long all in prose that is as lean and clean as its implications can be dark.
Review: Everything Like Before, by Kjell Askildsen, translated from the Norwegian by Sean Kinsella FICTION: A collection of spare, wry short stories from a Norwegian master of the form.
By Malcom Forbes Special to the Star Tribune April 23, 2021 8:44am Text size Copy shortlink:
Kjell Askildsen is one of Norway s greatest living writers. He is also one of that country s best kept literary secrets, for despite producing a range of award-winning fiction for almost 70 years, only a trickle of his huge output has appeared in English. With luck, Everything Like Before will raise his profile. Deftly translated by Séan Kinsella, this selection of odd, austere yet transfixing stories from various p