MANY PEOPLE DIE LIKE YOU

Book Cover

The characters in Swedish author Wolff’s latest book are bored by the mundanity of their lives. They cheat on each other or demand violence in the midst of sex. In “Imagine a Living Tree,” Kent finds that his wife’s 20-year-old former lover has come to stay with them “until I’ve figured things out with my girlfriend,” he says. Kent remembers a conversation with his sister. “Men,” she’d told him, “think everything is fine and dandy, and then one day the wife finds someone else and bails. When they talk about it later, the wife will say I’ve had the most boring time with you.” Had his own wife had a boring time? Kent wonders. In another story, a woman hires a detective to follow her husband’s mistress. Then she seduces the detective. Some of the stories are set in Spain while others occur in Wolff’s native Sweden. In one, a young man in a small Swedish village begins an affair with his elderly piano student. This story is intriguingly narrated by a collective “We,” which represents the village as a whole. The village does not approve. Wolff excels with the disaffected and the weird. Her stories, though, have an unfortunate habit of ending just before they begin to delve too deeply into any particular subject. They plumb the surfaces of things but hardly ever the depths.



Thanks for reading.
Please Share, Comment, Like the post And Follow, Subscribe CTS Store.

fromSource
MANY PEOPLE DIE LIKE YOU MANY PEOPLE DIE LIKE YOU Reviewed by CTS Store on August 17, 2020 Rating: 5

No comments