Min Kamp (12 books in series)
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review 1: Boyhood. Blue Is The Warmest Color. Satantango. These types of stories that lag on for hours while seemingly telling vital stories of miniature details. Brilliance that exists by having an editor apply a light if not invisible touch. So here's the book I'm told to have an opinion...
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review 1: I liked this a bit better than the first volume, although it is less intense and perhaps less memorable. It is certainly less difficult to read, I imagine, for his friends and family. He does not really explain his apparently sudden decision to leave his first wife and country an...
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review 1: Continuing with the Book 2, I caught myself at a sole interest, which I feel towards it's content: purely anthropological and sociological one. I am curious how do they live out there, in Scandinavia; how this schizoid guy manages his life; where his struggle leads and will it al...
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review 1: I enjoyed this but did prefer the first volume, which was discomfiting in a different way. Here I feel I have some clandestine, happenstance background knowledge that he will become frustrated and may break up with Linda in time -- the wandering eye to come --, even as I am read...
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review 1: I don't know what it is about Knausgaard that keeps me reading through page after page of very "normal", ordinary stuff, but he does it and I love it. This third book was supposed to be less intense than the previous two, but I enjoyed it equally, if not more than the others. Per...
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review 1: I did enjoy "Boyhood Island" but not the same way I loved "A Man in Love".In many ways it was a good reminder of what growing up in small town/rural area pre-internet was like, very much like my own childhood lots of unsupervised playing outside, the imamgination was the limit an...
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review 1: Hot on the heels of reading volume 2, I pitched into reading the third volume - 'Boyhood island'. This time it goes far back in time and covers Knausgaard's childhood and early teen years. His father once again looms large and frankly he's a bit of a monster. Not abusive as such ...
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review 1: More of everyday life with Karl Ove, his long-suffering girlfriend, and their growing family, living in Stockholm, in the present day. Knausgaard writes essays in the middle of his meandering recording of everything he does every day: making dinner for his family, doing the dish...
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review 1: There's not a lot I can say about this book that hasn't been said or written somewhere else. So I'll just say that, while reading it, I enjoyed all those moments when my youngest daughter (she's 7) walked into the room, saw the cover of the book I was reading, and bellowed, "MY S...
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review 1: Wat een ontdekking deze schrijver. Prachtige zinnen, zonder opsmuk en schaamteloos. "Ik sloeg de krant dicht en we praatten, het liep goed af, dat kleine zwarte vlekje in mijn hart was nauwelijks merkbaar, de vage wens om alleen te zijn en rustig te lezen zonder dat iemand iets v...
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review 1: Knausgaard has already won me over. The first book was great, the second completely mesmerized me. Still, I was apprehensive at best about Boyhood, thinking that the topic would veer too close to the less fascinating themes of the first volume rather than the second. I should not...
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review 1: "Ik had altijd al van het donker gehouden. Toen ik klein was, was ik er bang voor als ik alleen was, maar als ik samen was met anderen, vond ik het heerlijk, het donker en de metamorfose van de wereld waar het voor stond. Rondhollen in het bos of tussen de huizen in het donker wa...