#WITMonth, Part II: Wioletta Greg, Dorthe Nors, Almudena Sánchez and More

My next four reads for Women in Translation month (after Part I here) were, again, a varied selection: a mixed volume of family history in verse and fragmentary diary entries, a set of nature/travel essays set mostly in Denmark, a memoir of mental illness, and a preview of a forthcoming novel about Mary Shelley’s inspirations for Frankenstein. One final selection will be coming up as part of my Love Your Library roundup on Monday.

 

(20 Books of Summer, #13)

Finite Formulae & Theories of Chance by Wioletta Greg (2014)

[Translated from the Polish by Marek Kazmierski]

I loved Greg’s Swallowing Mercury so much that I jumped at the chance to read something else of hers in English translation – plus this was less than half price AND a signed copy. I had no sense of the contents and might have reconsidered had I known a few things: the first two-thirds is family wartime history in verse, the rest is a fragmentary diary from eight years in which Greg lived on the Isle of Wight, and the book is a bilingual edition, with Polish and English on facing pages (for the poems) or one after the other (for the diary entries). I’m not sure what this format adds for English-language readers; I can’t know whether Kazmierski has rendered anything successfully. I’ve always thought it must be next to impossible to translate poetry, and it’s certainly hard to assess these as poems. They are fairly interesting snapshots from her family’s history, e.g., her grandfather’s escape from a stalag, and have quite precise vocabulary for the natural world. There’s also been an attempt to create or reproduce alliteration. I liked the poem the title phrase comes from, “A Fairytale about Death,” and “Readers.” The short diary entries, though, felt entirely superfluous. (New purchase – Waterstones bargain, 2023)

 

(20 Books of Summer, #14)

A Line in the World: A Year on the North Sea Coast by Dorthe Nors (2021; 2022)

[Translated from the Danish by Caroline Waight]

Nors’s first nonfiction work is a surprise entry on this year’s Wainwright Prize nature writing shortlist. I’d be delighted to see this work in translation win, first because it would send a signal that it is not a provincial award, and secondly because her writing is stunning. Like Patrick Leigh Fermor, Aldo Leopold or Peter Matthiessen, she doesn’t just report what she sees but thinks deeply about what it means and how it connects to memory or identity. I have a soft spot for such philosophizing in nature and travel writing.

You carry the place you come from inside you, but you can never go back to it.

I longed … to live my brief and arbitrary life while I still have it.

This eternal, fertile and dread-laden stream inside us. This fundamental question: do you want to remember or forget?

Nors lives in rural Jutland – where she grew up, before her family home was razed – along the west coast of Denmark, the same coast that reaches down to Germany and the Netherlands. In comparison to Copenhagen and Amsterdam, two other places she’s lived, it’s little visited and largely unknown to foreigners. This can be both good and bad. Tourists feel they’re discovering somewhere new, but the residents are insular – Nors is persona non grata for at least a year and a half simply for joking about locals’ exaggerated fear of wolves.

Local legends and traditions, bird migration, reliance on the sea, wanderlust, maritime history, a visit to church frescoes with Signe Parkins (the book’s illustrator), the year’s longest and shortest days … I started reading this months ago and set it aside for a time, so now find it difficult to remember what some of the essays are actually about. They’re more about the atmosphere, really: the remote seaside, sometimes so bleak as to seem like the ends of the earth. (It’s why I like reading about Scottish islands.) A bit more familiarity with the places Nors writes about would have pushed my rating higher, but her prose is excellent throughout. I also marked the metaphors “A local woman is standing there with a hairstyle like a wolverine” and “The sky looks like dirty mop-water.”

With thanks to Pushkin Press for the proof copy for review.

Pharmakon by Almudena Sánchez (2021; 2023)

[Translated from the Spanish by Katie Whittemore]

This is a memoir in micro-essays about the author’s experience of mental illness, as she tries to write herself away from suicidal thoughts. She grew up on Mallorca, always feeling like an outsider on an island where she wasn’t a native. Did her depression stem from her childhood, she wonders? She is also a survivor of ovarian cancer, diagnosed when she was 16. As her mind bounces from subject to subject, “trying to analyze a sick brain,” she documents her doctor visits, her medications, her dreams, her retweets, and much more. She takes inspiration from famous fellow depressives such as William Styron and Virginia Woolf. Her household is obsessed with books, she says, and it’s mostly through literature that she understands her life. The writing can be poetic, but few pieces stand out on the whole. My favourite opens: “Living in between anxiety and apathy has driven me to flowerpot decorating.”

With thanks to Fum d’Estampa Press for the free copy for review.

 

And a bonus preview:

Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein by Anne Eekhout (2021; 2023)

[Translated from the Dutch by Laura Watkinson]

Anne Eekhout’s fourth novel and English-language debut is an evocative recreation of two momentous periods in Mary Shelley’s life that led – directly or indirectly – to the composition of her 1818 masterpiece. Drawing parallels between the creative process and motherhood and presenting a credibly queer slant on history, the book is full of eerie encounters and mysterious phenomena that replicate the Gothic science fiction tone of Frankenstein itself. The story lines are set in the famous “Year without a Summer” of 1816 (the storytelling challenge with Lord Byron) and during a period in 1812 that she spent living in Scotland with the Baxter family; Mary falls in love with the 17-year-old daughter, Isabella.

Coming out on 3 October from HarperVia. My full review for Shelf Awareness is pending.

19 responses

  1. A Life in Books's avatar

    Keen to read the Nors. I’ve enjoyed her fiction so will be interested to see how she handles writing about the natural world. Love that wolverine quote!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’d only ever read Mirror, Shoulder, Signal, which I liked but didn’t love. I thought the writing was superb here.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. A Life in Books's avatar

        Ah, I enjoyed Mirror… also her short stories.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Klausbernd's avatar

    This is the first time that we have read two of the books you reviewed, and we both liked them. The book about the North Sea (we live at the North Sea coast but a bit more north than the author) and the book about Frankenstein. Both books we can recommend as well, especially the book about the North Sea. Who has read some books about M. Shelley, and there are many, will know most of it but who is new to this circle of the Romantics will love it.
    Thanks & cheers
    The Fab Four of Cley
    🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It seems like there have been a number of novels engaging with Shelley and Frankenstein recently. I am currently loving Reproduction by Louisa Hall.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Laura's avatar

    The Nors and the Eeekhout sound especially interesting to me. I wonder if the rush of novels about Frankenstein is a combo of the continuing interest in feminist historical fiction plus the newer horror renaissance?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      The Eekhout is coming out in the UK from Pushkin Press on 2 November. I’ve also wondered what prompted this small spate of Frankenstein-inspired novels, beyond the 200th anniversary of its publication (2018). The evidence of Shelley’s bisexuality is fairly recent, based on a new understanding of her letters gained in the last few years. I’ve done a Q&A with the author, and my first question was indeed about the enduring appeal of the story. She called it the first SF novel.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Well, my cousin might like the first one as he’s been learning Polish for a while so he can talk to his husband and his relatives in their native language but that DOES seem quite niche … A Line in the World looks like just my kind of thing.

    I have a Serendipity building and also I keep finding aurochsen in my reading but I think that’s because I’m reading a lot of nature and rewilding books so don’t think that necessarily Counts …

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I would certainly recommend A Line in the World.

      I also had a time when I kept reading about aurochs!

      Like

  5. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    I’m happy to hear your take on the Nors book. I took an online class with her (about the work of Ditlevsen and other Scandi authors) and she was wonderful! Super insightful and so engaging. I enjoyed her latest slim volume of short stories. Can’t wait to pick up this nonfiction!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Wow, sounds like that was an amazing opportunity. I’d like to try her stories.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Julé Cunningham's avatar

    I’m sorry to hear the Greg wasn’t up to the standard of Swallowing Mercury, that is a wonderful book. A Line in the World is a favorite of mine from this year, my copy was festooned with post-its marking passages and I really appreciated how she wove the different threads together.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      The Greg felt strangely like leftovers or castoffs. I don’t know if she has any other works available in English.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. margaret21's avatar

    The Nors sounds interesting: though like you, I feel that familiarity with the landscape would help.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ve not been to Scandinavia, though I’d like to (not sure we can afford it!).

      Liked by 1 person

      1. margaret21's avatar

        Years ago, we had a couple of delightful holidays in Denmark. I’d cheerfully return.

        Liked by 1 person

  8. […] final #WITMonth selection (I’m pleased with my total of nine, after these four and those four!) and a perfect choice for readers of Shaun Bythell’s bookshop diaries. Instead of a lovable […]

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  9. […] followed by two chef’s memoirs, A Cook’s Tour by Anthony Bourdain and Dirt by Bill Buford, and Dorthe Nors’ nature/travel essays. The one DNF and couple of skims are unfortunate, but these things […]

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  10. […] A Line in the World by Dorthe Nors: Nors lives in rural Jutland along the west coast of Denmark – little visited and largely unknown to foreigners. This can be both good and bad. Tourists feel they’re discovering somewhere new, but the residents are insular. Local legends and traditions, bird migration, reliance on the sea, wanderlust, maritime history, a visit to church frescoes, and more. Gorgeous writing and atmosphere, despite the bleakness. […]

    Like

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