Archives

design
August 22, 2017 , Tue | Reviews | 0 or add you thoughts!

“Years from now, we’ll tell this story: Once upon a time, there was a wolf called Romeo. Together, we watch him trot across the lake and fade into twilight. And we remember.”

Themes:

  • Human perception of top predators
  • Conservation and environmental politics
  • Evolutionary relationship between wolves and dogs

Wolves, dogs, interspecies communication, the wilderness, conservation—if you enjoy any of these topics, A Wolf Called Romeo will enthrall you. I expected this to be one of those “food-conditioned wild animal acts friendly sometimes and we got great photos” scenarios. Far from it, and Jans condemns food conditioning throughout the book. He has a real understanding of and respect for Romeo as a wild animal, and even hopes throughout the novel that the wolf will move on, live his natural life, and keep out of harm’s—aka humanity’s—way.

Environmental politics are central in this story, and I think Jans does an excellent job of staying as unbiased as possible despite his obvious love for animals, wolves in particular. I deeply appreciated Jans’s levelheaded, far-from-dramatic approach to each event and the community’s various reactions. I came away with a detailed understanding of the beliefs, historical perspectives, and emotions involved on both sides. read more

design
July 25, 2017 , Tue | Reviews | 0 or add you thoughts!

“Noah holds the old man’s hand, the man who taught  him to fish and to never be afraid of big thoughts and to look at the night’s sky and understand that it’s made of numbers. Mathematics blessed the boy in that sense, because he’s no longer afraid of the thing almost everyone else is terrified of: infinity. Noah loves space because it never ends. It never dies. It’s the one thing in his life which won’t ever leave him.”

Themes:

  • Familial structures, particularly the difference between parent-child and grandparent-grandchild relationships
  • The idea of a life well spent
  • Mathematics, the universe, and how intellect looks different in every individual

I’m beginning to think of Fredrik Backman as an all-time favorite, auto-buy author. Before now, I had only read A Man Called Ove, which I loved. But after reading this novella, I think I can safely say I will adore all of his work.

In Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer, Backman explores the toll Alzheimer’s disease takes on both the person experiencing it and those around them. Through Grandpa, Ted, and Noah, the reader is given an intimate glimpse into an illness that is, unfortunately, prominent in our lives today. read more

design