Tuesday 7 May 2024

Thirty Days of Darkness by Jenny Lund Madsen (translated by Megan Turney)

I am delighted to share my review of Thirty Days of Darkness, written by Jenny Lund Madsen and translated into English by Megan Turney, for my stop on the blog tour to  celebrate the paperback release of the book this month. But thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Tours for inviting me and to the publisher for my gorgeous review copy (complete with spredges, what a treat!). 




 


The Blurb

A snobbish Danish literary author is challenged to write a crime novel in thirty days, travelling to a small village in Iceland for inspiration, and then a body appears … an atmospheric, darkly funny, twisty debut thriller, first in an addictive new series.

Copenhagen author Hannah is the darling of the literary community and her novels have achieved massive critical acclaim. But nobody actually reads them, and frustrated by writer's block, Hannah has the feeling that she's doing something wrong.

When she expresses her contempt for genre fiction, Hanna is publicly challenged to write a crime novel in thirty days. Scared that she will lose face, she accepts, and her editor sends her to Húsafjöður – a quiet, tight-knit village in Iceland, filled with colourful local characters – for inspiration.

But two days after her arrival, the body of a fisherman's young son is pulled from the water … and what begins as a search for plot material quickly turns into a messy and dangerous investigation that threatens to uncover secrets that put everything at risk … including Hannah…

The paperback edition of Thirty Days of Darkness comes out this Thursday, 9th May 2024, and is available here and will also be stocked by Sainsburys supermarkets in the UK.



My Review

Hannah Krause-Bendix writes literary fiction. She is confident her novels are brilliant, she just needs people to read them. Although she seems to have no time for readers. She is contemptuous of crime fiction and its authors, although I sense she would have no time for any genre that actually sold books which appeal to large numbers of people. So to not accept a challenge to write such a novel, something that is obviously so easy to do, in a month, would be to risk humiliation. However, she doesn't factor in being in a different country, a host who doesn't speak Danish or English, or a complicated relationship. Oh, and a murder and significant personal risk.... And she still has a book to write! 

When we first meet Hannah, she is not likeable. At all, really. Her only real friend is Bastian, her editor. She thinks pretty much everything and everyone is beneath her but is very much the tortured writer, agonising over her words whilst consuming alcohol and cigarettes in excess. She does acknowledge, at least though, that she really needs to start selling some books. But her frustrations at this and contempt for a popular Danish crime author who does sell books, and lots of them, lead her to the small Icelandic fishing village of Húsafjöður for a month - fishing boats, snow and not a lot of daylight. 

There are certainly many colourful characters for her to be inspired by. Stand outs for me were Ella, Hannah's host for the month. Welcoming and accepting, she doesn't bad an eyelid at her guest's odd and often rude behaviour. She is a model for how Hannah could be. I loved her part Danish, part English notes. Another character I liked was the barman at the village's only bar whose name we never learn but who proves to be a handy man to have around. And I can't forget about lovely Jørn.  The interesting thing about seeing these folk through Hannah's eyes is that she views them all as inferior to her in some way. Also, she doesn't really get relationships, possibly because she's not very successful at her own. The Icelandic landscape and the weather also play important roles here, but despite the cold, we do see Hannah beginning to thaw just a little. 

But this is a novel about writing a crime novel. And what more inspiration could Hannah want than a murder? But she is unprepared for the impact the crime has on her, the people around her and the book she is trying to write. Inspiration comes thick and fast, but she discovers she wants a satisfactory conclusion for more than the story. Even if her crime investigation skills leave much to be desired.

I haven't really conveyed how clever this book is. As someone whose first love is crime fiction I know how it's a genre that tends to be looked down on by some of the wider fiction community, not classed as 'real' literature. Nonsense, if course, but I love how this book plays with that whole idea. It's self aware, a bit meta, humorous,  but tense in all the right places, and the tension just ramps up as the book progresses. Thirty Days of Darkness is a crime novel about writing a crime novel whilst investigating a crime. It's totally entertaining and absorbing - I read it in one sitting - and a very assured fiction debut. Highly recommended. And a big shout out, as always, for an excellent translation, this time provided by Megan Turney.


The Author


Jenny Lund Madsen is one of one of Denmark’s most acclaimed scriptwriters (including the international hits Rita and Follow the Money) and is known as an advocate for better representation for sexual and ethnic minorities in Danish TV and film. She recently made her debut as a playwright with the critically acclaimed Audition (Aarhus Teater) and her debut literary thriller, Thirty Days of Darkness, first in an addictive new series, won the Harald Mogensen Prize for Best Danish Crime Novel of the year and was shortlisted for the coveted Glass Key Award. She lives in Denmark with her young family.



Saturday 4 May 2024

My Second Life by Simon Yeats


Today is my stop on the blog tour for My Second Life by Simon Yeats, which focuses not on his many travel adventures but, rather, his battle for access to his son. My thanks to Rachel Gilbey at Rachel's Random Resources for the invitation and to the author for my review copy of the book.



The Blurb

Right at this moment, my abducted son is being abused in another country and there is nothing I can do about it other than write this book to get publicity for his story.

We all have two lives. We only get to experience living in the second after we realize we only have just one.

I have my first real scare in life when I get attacked by a kangaroo when I am seven. My first brush with the cliff-face edge of death comes when I am 12. My dad drives the family down the dangerous Skipper’s Canyon dirt road in New Zealand in a rented minivan.

Including the occasion I am almost involved in two different plane flight crashes in the same night, there have been at least a half dozen more occasions when I have been within a moment’s inattention of being killed.

However, none of those frightening incidents compare to what I experience after my son is abducted.

This memoir is the story of how I used the traumatic experiences of my life to give me strength to forge on during a 13 year fight to be a father to my son.

What did it take for me to get to my second life?
It took me to truly understand what fear is.


Purchase Links

Amazon UK 
Amazon US 
Barnes & Noble 
Kobo 
Smashwords 



My Review

I recently read one of Simon Yeats's travel memoirs, How to Start a Riot in a Brothel in Thailand by Ordering a Beer..., so know that he could tell an entertaining yarn, but this book has a very different tone. The title comes from the Confucious saying 'We all have two lives. And the second one begins when we realise we only have one' and this is Yeats's story of the extraordinary circumstances that brought him to his second life.  

Before I start, I will say there were a couple of things I struggled with. It is written entirely in the present tense even though much of what is being described took place in the past, which does lead to some confusion here and there. And as with his travel memoir, this book would've benefited from a much tighter edit. 

But these things don't detract from what he is saying. A lot of what is written sounds unbelievable, but Yeats is aware of this and reassures us that every word is true. Much of the first half of the book is dedicated to some of Yeats's terrifying brushes with death - I was slightly confused though when he was about to plunge down an almost sheer cliff of snow and ice at the end of one chapter and in a car accident in the next - and they are incredible to read, real heart in the mouth stuff. His point in telling us though, is that none of these brought him to his second life. 

The second part of the book is the real story here - Yeats's long, arduous and ongoing battles for access to his son, who is currently with his mother in Brazil - Yeats is an Australian living in the US. I won't go into detail here about it, you'd not believe me anyway if I did, but it's utterly heartbreaking to read, with occasional utterly joyful moments on the odd time he has been able to see his son. I was moved to tears many times. I am aware, of course, that we are only hearing one side of a story here but it would seem that there has been no level of justice given in this case and Mr Yeats does not seem to have been given any opportunity to state his case or mount any meaningful legal battle. And there is much, much more than that, as you will see if you read this book. 

I must also mention a couple of things from Yeats's work as a physical therapist. This is a dedicated man with a calling to his job. I had wet eyes reading about David and Jacob, whose father first made Yeats aware of the Confucious saying. You will be touched by these stories, as well as the main, important one here. I was also moved by the author's stories of his own father, the love he has for him and strong model of fatherhood he has obviously set. 

My Second Life is a hard to read in places, shocking in many and almost unbelievable in plenty of others. It's a tale of one man's long hard fight to see his son that will resonate with many but particularly those of us who.are parents. I cried for him and I cried for his son but it's a book I am glad to have read. 


The Author


Simon Yeats has lived nine lives, and by all estimations, is fast running out of the number he has left. His life of globetrotting the globe was not the one he expected to lead. He grew up a quiet, shy boy teased by other kids on the playgrounds for his red hair. But he developed a keen wit and sense of humor to always see the funnier side of life.

With an overwhelming love of travel, a propensity to find trouble where there was none, and being a passionate advocate of mental health, Simon’s stories will leave a reader either rolling on the floor in tears of laughter, or breathing deeply that the adventures he has had were survived.

No author has laughed longer or cried with less restraint at the travails of life.


Author Social Media Links

Tik Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@authoryeats
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/authoryeats/?hl=en
 


Thirty Days of Darkness by Jenny Lund Madsen (translated by Megan Turney)

I am delighted to share my review of Thirty Days of Darkness, written by Jenny Lund Madsen and translated into English by Megan Turney, for ...