Reviews and Comments

Jan Kjellin

Janne@bookrastinating.com

Joined 1 year, 5 months ago

Primarily likes to read scifi/horror/fantasy/anything on the edge of the ordinary...

Falun, Sweden. Will post in swedish or english, depending on the language of the book.

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Stephen King: Misery (Paperback, 1988, New American Library) 4 stars

Paul Sheldon. He's a bestselling novelist who has finally met his biggest fan. Her name …

Content warning mentions part of the plot that should be obvious, but you never really can know, can you?

Scratching the surface

2 stars

I wouldn't go as far as to call out Abrahamsson as a charlatan, but this collection of lectures and articles explains very little or virtually nothing about those unseen forces mentioned (promised?) in the title. Nor does he go in-depth in any of those texts. It'a a mere scratching on the surface, an obscured invitation ("DO YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE?" of sorts to apply for a membership that will provide to you the Truth - if you can handle it. ("YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH!").

I have friends in deep rabbit holes who would love this book for it's mix of talks on individual spiritual growth paired with the occational dog whistles about contemp(t)orary, woke society.

That said; some of Abrahamssons main points about the creative force of opposites and his mentions of magic/magick as a term for the unmeasurable, invisible (occult) aspects of existence do resonate with me. …

Shahram Khosravi: 'Illegal' Traveller (en language, 2011, Palgrave MacMillan) 5 stars

Based on fieldwork among undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers, Illegal Traveller offers a narrative of …

On being inbetween and outside

4 stars

This was an interesting read from start to finish. The auto-ethnographic framing provides a hands-on perspective to questions easily dismissed as too theoretical, far-fetched or even general (as in being able to apply to all and anyone who has ever felt displaced) to have relevance in discussions on migration and refugees, as well as racism and nationalism.

The border as intertwined between the imagined communities of nations is something Khosravie doen't really discuss explicitly until the latter part of the book, but it's nonetheless present throughout the entire text. Crossing - or rather entering - it, transforms the human and displaces her to outside a world where nationality defines her very existance and thus strips her of her (human) rights.

Leaving is easy. It's entering that's at the root of the problem. I appreciate the way Khosravi manages to navigate through immigration policies and the often atrocious handling of refugees …

Shahram Khosravi: 'Illegal' Traveller (en language, 2011, Palgrave MacMillan) 5 stars

Based on fieldwork among undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers, Illegal Traveller offers a narrative of …

It seems the book can be divided in two; the first half being - as said in the description - "a narrative of the polysemic nature of borders, border politics, and rituals and performances of border-crossing". However, after Khosravi has arrived in Sweden and left the refugee center in Kiruna, another story emerges. On racism and the sisyphusic (sp?) struggle of trying to become part of the new, post-border-crossing, society. I'm not quite sure yet what I think of that. It's interesting, but is it relevant to the overall narrative? Or is it more of an epilogue? I guess I'll see, once I've finished it.

Oksana Maksymchuk, Max Rosochinsky: Words for War (2018, Academic Studies Press) 3 stars

"The armed conflict in the east of Ukraine brought about an emergence of a distinctive …

A war not a war

3 stars

Reading this collection of poems in parallell with the constant newsflow from Russia's invasive war in Ukraine does affect my understanding of it. The words are undoubtedly accompanied by televised images, realizing the depicted places in ways far surpassing my own imagination.

This of course make it difficult to provide a nuanced review. How do I disregard the current siege of Marioupol [I read the book in may 2022 -Janne] to evaluate the flow and sincerity of Boris Khersonsky's poems? How can I not weave in the constant flow of reported atrocities while reading Borys Humenyuk's depiction of blood red seagulls / dropping pieces of human flesh / like rain / stolen from the battlefield?

Some of the poems - as well as individual verses and lines - I'll carry with me as the war rages on. Others, I have to confess, weren't in my taste. But the overall feeling …

Stephen King: Eldfödd (Paperback, swedish language, Legenda Pocket) 4 stars

Firestarter is a science fiction-horror thriller novel by Stephen King, first published in September 1980. …

Oväntat ordinärt om extraordinär eldmakare

2 stars

Content warning Some mention of the plot.

Oksana Maksymchuk, Max Rosochinsky: Words for War (2018, Academic Studies Press) 3 stars

"The armed conflict in the east of Ukraine brought about an emergence of a distinctive …

Ett krig som inte är ett krig

3 stars

Aktualiteten i att läsa den här samlingen med flödet av nyheter om/från Rysslands invasionskrig i Ukraina påverkar självklart min läsning. Orden ackompanjeras av bilder som nyss passerat näthinnan och platserna som skildras är inte så okända eller anonyma som de varit annars. Det här gör det svårt att ge ett nyanserat omdöme. Hur lägger jag belägringen av Marioupol åt sidan för att bedöma flödet och innerligheten i Boris Khersonskys dikter? Hur kan jag inte väva in de fruktansvärda övergrepp som hela tiden rapporteras om i sociala medier-flödet i läsningen av Borys Humenyuks skildring av blodröda måsar som tappar kroppsdelar / likt regn / som de stulit från slagfältet?

En del dikter - liksom enskilda strofer och rader - kommer jag att bära med mig. Annat, måste jag erkänna, föll mig inte i smaken, rent stilistiskt.

Men den sammantagna känslan av att befinna sig i ett krig som inte är ett …

Isaac Marion: Warm Bodies and The New Hunger: A Special 5th Anniversary Edition (2016, Atria/Emily Bestler Books) 2 stars

Zombieskapet som metafysik

2 stars

Tammefan om inte Isaac Marion hade ett par riktigt bra idéer att utgå från i den här boken! "Zombieskapet" som metafysiskt tillstånd är egentligen klockrent, liksom placeringen av det som den självklara (törs man säga "den naturliga"?) slutpunkten på mänsklighetens nihilistiska förvaltning av vår värld och civilisation. Stora ord, jag vet. Och kanske beror det på att jag precis läst "Misslyckas igen, misslyckas bättre" (Ajvide Lindqvist) och därmed är lite mer välvilligt inställd till författarskapets vedermödor; att en bra idé inte nödvändigtvis måste landa i en lika bra berättelse. Men det är faktiskt inte helt oävet, även om - eller trots att - man inte gillar berättelsen helt och hållet. Jag hade en idé - har den fortfarande; i en byrålåda - till en berättelse som kanske kan anses liknande. Där zombierna egentligen inte är zombies, men ändå är det. En samhällskommentar på ungefär det sätt jag uppfattar IM's bok …

Neil Gaiman: Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances (Paperback, 2013, Headline Book Publishing) 4 stars

A circle of two

3 stars

I read this together with a friend in an attempt to create a small (2 person) book circle. We read a couple of novels, then called each other on the phone and talked for an hour (repeat every two or three weeks until read). It worked great! Not only did we manage to see dimensions of the stories otherwise lost; we also expanded our respective literary universes through free associations to other authors and books, as well as movies, music, real life experiences and so on.

Oh, yes, the stories, you ask. How did I like them? Some were good, others not so great. One or two were really funny and interesting. And I will carry certain triggers and disturbances with me for a long time.

In a good way, mind you!

John Milton: Paradise Lost (Hardcover, 2013, Atlasbooks Dist Serv, Arcturus Publishing Limited) 2 stars

Paradise Lost

2 stars

Wow! This was a tough read.

"Book VII" was by far the most enjoyable part of this epic poem. Here, I feel Milton really shines as the poet hw was. But as far as interpretations of religious myths go, Milton's take has indeed aged.

Well, at least now I can say that I've read it. That must account for something, right? ;)