De tabte minders ø

eBook

Danish language

Published Sept. 29, 2021 by Gyldendal.

ISBN:
978-87-02-30609-5
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4 stars (6 reviews)

De tabte minders ø er en roman om mindernes kraft, om frygtens hærgen og kærligheden som ingen kan tage fra én.

På en isoleret ø begynder tingene gradvist at forsvinde; fugle, roser, bøger – og med dem minderne om deres eksistens. Kun få mennesker kan ikke glemme – og de må leve i frygten for, at deres evne til at huske opdages af erindringspolitiet.

Da en ung forfatter finder ud af, at hendes redaktør er i fare for at blive arresteret, beslutter hun sig for at skjule ham i sin kælder. Mens verden udenfor forsvinder for dem, arbejder de på at afslutte hendes roman. Et tæt forhold udvikler sig – og midt i fangenskabet spirer kærligheden langsomt frem.

7 editions

Very simple prose, but still a good read.

4 stars

The story was enjoyable enough which was good since there really isn't a massive underlying story going on. You do not get any answers as to what is going on. You are literally following the MC as she is experiencing things in her life disappear and you never know anything more than what she knows.

All the characters in this book are anonymous, no names are ever given, but it felt right and did not detract from being able to follow the story at all.

There is not some big "AH-HA" moment where everything clicks. For me, it came across that in the beginning, the MC is afraid of losing her editor/friend (who does not lose his memories) after having lost her parents. But on the flip side, her friend is watching her deteriorate bit by bit as the memories are taken from her and she begins to forget how …

Scarily real

5 stars

I previously loved reading a collection of Yoko Ogawa's short stories, Revenge, so enthusiastically grabbed my copy of The Memory Police when it appeared on NetGalley. The novel was first published in Japanese twenty-five years ago and has only just been translated into English - an amazingly good job by the talented Stephen Snyder. The Memory Police is the novel that I had hoped If Cats Disappeared From The World would be - dark, mysterious, and, actual impossibility aside, scarily real.

Ogawa vividly portrays a science fiction dystopia where an island people have grown so used to abruptly being deprived of things that the loss of something more barely provokes a comment. Once deemed Disappeared, any surviving examples of an item are swiftly, voluntarily destroyed by the populace and once out of sight, these items are soon out of mind. The hatmaker retrains as an umbrella maker when hats Disappear. …

avatar for kiskadee

rated it

3 stars
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rated it

5 stars

Subjects

  • Fiction, general
  • Authors, fiction

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