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It's a little unfortunate – and quite disappointing, given the quality here – that we have had to wait eight years for this to appear in English, for the topical references are out of date and a little of the social relevance a little off-kilter as a result. All the same there is an ageless quality to this book, of the middle-age man having a one-man revolution, seeming a mad, hirsute wild man of the forest to others, and of course completely lucid and admirable to the reader. It's a read of just a couple of hours, and you do successfully forget he is unlikely to have written this down for us, his audience – one small indication of how great the writing is. This is a charming little tome, and while it luckily doesn't come in smellovision, given the (unrealistically never growing) elk, it certainly nails the author's intent, of giving us an amusingly subversive hero and both a unique voice and circumstance for him. It is well worth joining him.
I must thank the publishers for my review copy. We also have a review of [[Lazy Days by Erlend Loe, Don Bartlett (translator) and Don Shaw (translator)|Lazy Days by Erlend Loe]].
A different kind of Oslo man can be had with [[Professor Andersen's Night by Dag Solstad]].

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