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Cargando... Me on the Floor, Bleedingpor Jenny Jägerfeld
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Juvenile Fiction.
Juvenile Literature.
Young Adult Literature.
HTML: Award-winning novel: Best novel for young adults, Sweden A sawed-off thumb and a disappeared mom is the beginning of high school-outsider Maja's pursuit of an identity and love. .No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)839.738Literature German and related languages Other Germanic literatures Swedish literature Swedish fiction 2000-Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Having stated that, I will try and review the book like any other book.
It focuses on Maja, a young Swedish girl whose relationship with her divorced parents is as fucked-up and therefore as normal as most families. Her inner world is fast-paced, constantly flitting from one subject to another which provides an entertaining, funny and enjoyable time. Not to mention, this book is very easily read; I finished it in less than a day. Back to the book:
During woodwork Maja slices off the top of her left-hand thumb and hits her head on a table on her way to fainting.
She regains consciousness and is quickly joined and jokingly scathed by her best friend, a boy named Enzo. Their relationship is marked by quick interactions, jokes - often on each-other's expense - and their slight alienation from other students, especially two bullies.
Maja tries to get in touch with her mom but fails, even as she goes to her house to spend the weekend there. At nearly the same time, she meets Justin, a boy who tickles her fancy. Both with sharp minds and a keen like for each-other, they hook up and intertwine.
The general dialogue and the inner workings of the main character continues to be the author's forté, visible since her first book, "Hål i huvudet".
The mannerisms and delving into psychology that are littered throughout this book are clear results of the author being a psychologist herself; this is even funnier as Maja's mother is a psychologist. Despite this, the author manages quite well to separate the clinical from the inner thoughts that Maja sprinkles throughout the book.
A few words of criticism, after all, are due. Even though the character is in high school, the dialogue, at times, feels slightly dated, despite mentions of very modern things like Spotify. And I can't help feeling the book is the result of a bunch of good ideas tied together with loose string. Still, it's a person's inner workings we're dealing with in the book, an I-perspective.
Overall: entertaining and enriching the world that is Swedish novels aimed at youths. ( )