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Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name por…
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Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name (2007 original; edición 2007)

por Vendela Vida (Autor)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaConversaciones / Menciones
7935628,091 (3.61)1 / 91
On the day of her father's funeral, twenty-eight-year-old Clarissa Iver­ton discovers that he wasn't her biological father after all. Her mother disappeared fourteen years earlier, and her fiancé has just revealed a life-changing secret to her. Alone and adrift, Clarissa travels to mystical Lapland, where she believes she'll meet her real father. There, at a hotel made of ice, Clarissa is confronted with the truth about her mother's his­tory, and must make a decision about how--and where--to live the rest of her life.… (más)
Miembro:JeremyReppy
Título:Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name
Autores:Vendela Vida (Autor)
Información:Atlantic Books (2007), Edition: Main, 272 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:
Etiquetas:Ninguno

Información de la obra

Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name por Vendela Vida (2007)

Añadido recientemente porJeremyReppy, bellwoods, BJT104, sgwarnog, skyninja, ckelle06, biblioteca privada, Vonini, jmdunc54
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 Name that Book: Something about footsteps in snow/"literary" fiction12 no leídos / 12sparemethecensor, marzo 2014

» Ver también 91 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 57 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Young American woman relentlessly seeks her unknown biological father in Lapland among the native Sami people. The exotic setting contributes much to her sad tale, told in a spare style, as the heroine searches for love and identity connected only to her disabled brother back home in a facility in the U.S. Compelling story.
( )
  featherbooks | May 7, 2024 |
I dove into this with high expectations and was quite let down. ( )
  Andy5185 | Jul 9, 2023 |
Such clean, strong writing from Vendela Vida, completely in tune with the setting, which is the icy Lapland. The emotions a young woman experiences after her mother abandons their family when she’s a teenager are devastating in almost a quiet way, and Vida was successful in avoiding turning this into melodrama. The young woman discovers a secret about her past and goes searching for her mother, and as it plays out, the parallels of her life to her mother’s are eerie. Sadly one thing in common is rape, and how this is woven into the story is poignant. Vida is a joy to read because her characters feel so honest, nuanced and flawed as they are, and because her prose evokes imagery and a depth of feeling without calling attention to itself. ( )
1 vota gbill | Dec 30, 2022 |
A self-knowledge quest, performed while grieving. It could be ponderous or unsatisfying but isn't. ( )
  jennybeast | Apr 14, 2022 |
Wonderful

I'm very excited about this author, and plan to read everything she's got. They're otherworldly. Going to buy another one right now. ( )
1 vota CarolineanneE | Mar 28, 2020 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 57 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Shortly after the death of her father, Clarissa Iverton, the doleful narrator of Vida's angular second novel, discovers that he was not, in fact, her father. Abruptly abandoned by her restless mother when she was 14, Clarissa abruptly abandons her doting fiancé, travels to the far northern reaches of Scandinavia--where her mother had lived as a young woman--and begins searching for her lost birth parents. The urgency of Clarissa's quest never quite snaps into focus, but this novel's evanescent beauty is contained in prose as cool and crystalline as the ice hotel where she spends a night.

B+
añadido por sduff222 | editarEntertainment Weekly, Jennifer Reese (Jan 12, 2007)
 
When New Yorker Clarissa Iverton happens upon her birth certificate, she realizes that everyone she trusts, including her freshly deceased dad, knows that her biological father was a man she's never met. Since her mother walked out years earlier, Clarissa, the protagonist of Vida's accomplished second novel, must go to Finland to find the stranger who fathered her.

Vida, who is married to Dave Eggers, propels Clarissa alone into the dark snowscape where her birth secrets are buried. She perfectly captures the emotional dimension of Clarissa's search, showing that the truth, no matter how pockmarked, is preferable to fiction.
añadido por sduff222 | editarPeople, Maria Speidel (Jan 8, 2007)
 
This emotional core makes the book much more than an Edward Gorey comic strip. Take away the exotic setting and circumstance and you have a relentlessly believable story of a child’s futile struggle to, well, “be loved.” Enough children have to make their way through the world without nurture for this tale to strike a common chord, although Vida’s declared motives are a bit more abstract. In a brief afterword, she acknowledges “Against Narrativity,” an essay by Galen Strawson, as an inspiration for this novel; it made her “curious about the kind of person who would see their past as unconnected to their present.” Finally we understand that Clarissa’s mother is acting out a refusal to be a victim of her history. In the end, Clarissa does the same, almost — but, crucially, not quite — as ruthlessly. A Sami shaman who turns out not to be her father tells her of the northern lights, “We believe they are our ancestors.” Whatever sense Clarissa wins of her origins is just as brilliant, and as distant, as that.
 
Novels about unhappy young people who seek to escape their dysfunctional families and find a new identity are almost a genre to themselves, but the vivid scenes of Lapland, with its reindeer, northern lights, and Ice Hotel, give this novel a unique twist. There is even a whirlwind happy ending of a sort. Recommended for most libraries.
 
This is a sharp, sometimes brutal, portrait of a woman who feels her persona has been wiped away and wants to start over, not heal. Her careful, unadorned prose neatly reveals Clarissa's mix of damage and resolve, echoing Raymond Carver's minimalism while retaining the warmth that so many Carver imitators lack. And Vida's evocative descriptions of life in Lapland--the reindeer herds, the slow pace of the locals, a hotel made of snow and ice--underscore the themes of isolation and otherworldliness but never overwhelm the core story of Clarissa's despair.

A luminescent and evocative tale of grief, free of the standard cliches.
añadido por sduff222 | editarKirkus Reviews (Sep 15, 2006)
 

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Wikipedia en inglés (2)

On the day of her father's funeral, twenty-eight-year-old Clarissa Iver­ton discovers that he wasn't her biological father after all. Her mother disappeared fourteen years earlier, and her fiancé has just revealed a life-changing secret to her. Alone and adrift, Clarissa travels to mystical Lapland, where she believes she'll meet her real father. There, at a hotel made of ice, Clarissa is confronted with the truth about her mother's his­tory, and must make a decision about how--and where--to live the rest of her life.

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