Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name
Author | Vendela Vida |
---|---|
Genre | Novel |
Published | 2 January 2007 |
Publisher | Ecco Press |
Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name is a novel written by Vendela Vida. The book was first published on 2 January 2007 by Ecco Press. This was Vida's second published novel.[1][2][3][4]
Plot
[edit]Clarissa Iverton, a New Yorker is the female protagonist of the novel. Her mother disappeared when she was 14 years old, and when she became 28 years old, her father died. After the death of her father she realized that person was not her real father. Knowing this Clarissa becomes desperate to meet her real parents. She understands to unveil this secret she has travel to Finland. She abandons her fiancé and starts journey to Helsinki, Finland
Reviews
[edit]The novel was largely appreciated by reviewers and critics for its emotional complexity and dark humour. The Guardian wrote—[1]
The story is loaded with creepy quaintness. . . Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name tries to be many things - a thriller, a meditation on identity and language, a family romance gone wrong, a Lapland travelogue. Olivia emerges rather unexpectedly from the middle of it all, a comic invention of real energy and scope.
The New York Times found—[2]
Vida sustains a bleakly comic aspect of this excruciatingly sad story, as Clarissa blunders around the Arctic Rim, accosting strangers in the manner of that hapless lost chick in P. D. Eastman’s children’s classic, “Are You My Mother?”... 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.”
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Review Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
- ^ a b Bell, Madison Smartt (31 December 2006). "Are You My Mother?". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
- ^ "Let The Northern Lights Erase Your Name – Book Review". Caribousmom. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
- ^ "Book review". Kirkus. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
External links
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