The Woman at 1,000 Degrees: The International Bestseller
By (Author) Hallgrmur Helgason
Translated by Brian FitzGibbon
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
1st April 2018
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction in translation
Second World War fiction
839.6935
464
Width 146mm, Height 225mm, Spine 37mm
Eighty-year-old Herra Bjornsson lives alone in a garage with her laptop, an oxygen tank and her fathers old hand grenade. Neglected by her family, she spends her days spying on her children by hacking their emails and preparing to lose the race against the ticking time bomb of lung cancer, even making an appointment for her own cremation. As she counts down her final days, Herra looks back at her own remarkable life. Her happy childhood in Iceland was disrupted by the outbreak of war and her fathers fervent love of Hitler. Shipped off to supposed safety, Herra spent the war trekking alone across war-torn Europe in a desperate bid to survive. Based on the first Icelandic presidents real-life granddaughter, Hallgrmur Helgasons highly unusual and captivating tale spans the twentieth century in a way that is as hilarious as it is heart-breaking, taking readers on a whirlwind tour of Europe and South America before eventually returning home to Iceland where the final pieces of this haunting puzzle fall into place.
Published in 13 languages, this novel about one feisty Icelandic woman's proximity to history's big moments is a thoroughly entertaining ride.
* People magazine *A blitzkrieg of a novelFunny, shrewd and reliably rude This hugely entertaining tale is surely destined for classic status.
* Guardian *In this black-humoured novel...the narrator recounts her misshapen life with engaging vividness.
* The New Yorker *Breathtaking Herras life, and voice, is deeply compelling.
* Financial Times *The hottest new book from Iceland [Herras] perspective might be just what we need in these uncertain times: She survives and shares her story on her terms. And what a story it is, one worth reading to further understand the complexity of World War II and to enjoy the quick wit of a woman you wont forget.
* Washington Post *The Woman at 1,000 Degreesis incredibly funny, incredibly insightful and incredibly moving.
* Fiona Mozley, author of Elmet *What a novel! HelgasonsWoman at 1,000 Degreesis a gutsy, brilliant book: I could not tear myself away from it. Octogenarian Herra Bjrnssons dying recollections, as she lies nursing a hand grenade between her legs in an Icelandic garage, hurtle the reader headfirst into an epic narrative of war, loss, desire and survival, across years and continents. Both funny and deeply moving, I finished it utterly dazzled, my ears ringing.
* Hannah Kent, author of Burial Rites *One of the most original novels of the year.
* Irish Independent *An explosive experience.
* Elle *By turns funny,sweet, gripping and sad butnever sentimental, Helgason'swork...is a sensitivetale of a nearly lived life.
* Monocle *Herrais exceedingly quick-witted and has a wickedly colorful way with words Brilliantly written with flashing insights.
* Kirkus *'The Woman at 1,000 Degreesis a bold work of fiction that gnaws at the silence blanketing the blackest holes of humanity to lay bare the author's dark vision of truth.'
* Washington Independent Review of Books *'This novel is a shock, a laugh, an evocation of grief, and a tribute to survival and imagination.'
* Affinity Konar, author of Mischling *'Helgasons sad and funny novel begins in 2009, as 80-year-old Herra Bjrnsson lies dying in a Reykavk garage, still in possession of a live hand grenade from World War II...In her unsentimental, unsparing narrative, she offers insights into Icelandic culture and character, including a riff on reticence and a brief summary of Icelands financial meltdown. Like the Icelandic landscape, she can be both appealing and treacherous.'
* Publishers Weekly, starred review *Compellingupliftingrequired reading for those who want sour along with the sweet of life.
* New York Journal of Books *A very enjoyable storya terrific read. Herra is a great character; she is bawdy, at times outright vulgar and mischievous.
* The Bookshelf, ABC Radio Australia *'Gripping, darkly comic, and utterly original.'
* Valerie Martin, author of Property *'Icelandic novelist Helgason shares with John Irving a knack for masterful plotting and clever, sarcastic humour...anyone willing to...revel in its flights of language will find much to enjoy.'
* Booklist *Helgasons characters are rare beauties. One falls for his absurd fantasies immediately.
* Spiegel.de *Long after I read it, the story and its prickly protagonist has stayed with me.
* Esmeralda Santiago, author of When I Was Puerto Rican, New York Magazine *You dont know her yet, but she already despises you With a biting humour, she examines love, marriage, sex, politics, and those who practice them.
* Le Figaro Magazine *Extraordinarily absorbing and enjoyable. The story revolves around a woman who lived ahead of her time. Many young women would idealize HerraBjrnsson. At the same time, it gives an insight into life during World War II.
* Washington Book Review *'This is a profoundly, triumphantly feminist book...Theres nothing like it in our language.'
* Toronto Star *Helgasons novel is superbly written, with characters and events that grab your attention and make it hard to put down.
* Tulsa Book Review *Unpredictable and endearing.
* Jacksonville Journal-Courier *It's a sophisticated work, combining elements of Bildungsroman, comic burlesque, fictional biography and historical commentary The novel's sheer invention, talkativeness and linguistic zest recall Joyce, while the plot itself, with its logical progression into the absurd, is not too distant from the labyrinths of Kafka.
* David McDuff, literary translator and critic *A magnificent novel about maybe the most memorable character in Icelandic fiction.
* Frttablai *A mind-blowing doorstopper
This novel is toxic. The cover, the crumpled lady with the pink wig should have been warning enough, still one is stunned. This novel charges at you like a little terrier after you have opened a garden gate. It barks short, hoarse sentences. However, you dont want to put this book down again!
* Der Spiegel 1 *A ride through the 20th century of the ice island through the Nazi German Reich to Argentina and back again wildly, tough, and devilishly clever. Like it It rocks!
* Stern *The most surprising, funny, bonkers novel of the season
* Lire *Passionate, explosive and fiery
* El Periodico *Book of the year!
* SWR3 Radio *Irresistible.
* Paris Match *A caustic and human story that is tragic with a great sense of humour at the same time.
* ABC Libros *If this had been written by a different, non-Icelandic author, it would be a pulp Charles Dickens, with a bit of Chuck Palahniuk thrown in.
* Il Giornale *Playing with time and with history, this is a tragicomic and hard-hitting novel in which the author gets to the heart of a global situation and the vagaries of Icelandic politics.
* El Diario *Hallgrmur Helgasonis anIcelandicpainter, novelist, translator, and columnist. His first novel was published in 1990 and he came to international fame with his third novel,101 Reykjavik, which was translated into fourteen languages and was made into a film. A father of three, he divides his time betweenReykjavk and the island of Hrsey. Brian FitzGibbonis a translator and author. He is the translator of 101 Reykjavik, also byHallgrmur Helgason,and ofButterflies in Novemberby Auur Ava lafsdttir, which was longlisted for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize in 2014. He lives inReykjavk.