Synopses & Reviews
“A blissfully eccentric, fiction-enhanced memoir. . . . His prose buzzes with wonder, fearlessness and ecstatic ignorance: the sensations of youth. Each chapter is an epic in miniature.”—Hugo Lindgren, The New York Times Magazine
“Haunting and glorious . . . Niemi’s finest achievement is to have created a world poised between an adult’s fantastic memories of childhood and a child’s naïve dreams of his future. Graceless sentiments like disillusionment or regret are never allowed to trespass upon Pajala’s icy rivers and twilit woods. The future remains a frantic hallucination, while the past is absurd and wondrous.”—Nathaniel Rich, Los Angeles Times Book Review
“Popular Music from Vittula is a tale of boyhood friendship elastic enough to include numerous digressions, some fantastical, some so precise in their sociological observation . . . that an anthropologist could make good use of them. . . . In British translator Laurie Thompson’s hands, Niemi’s language is a constant, fresh poetic surprise. . . . Even the alphabet—‘a scary army of sticks and half-moons’—comes strangely alive in this marvelous book.”—Michael Upchurch, The Seattle Times
“A beautiful, poignant, often very funny novel about growing up in a remote area. Niemi writes with real poetry as he strings together the culturally rich vignettes of Matti’s experiences, snapshots of childhood that are at the same time intensely personal and universal . . . An exquisitely beautiful novel, artfully translated.”—Paula Luedkte, Booklist
Now in paperback, the enchanting, unforgettable Popular Music from Vittula is the single best-selling book in Swedish history.
Poet and novelist Mikael Niemi grew up in Pajala in the northernmost part of Sweden, near the Finnish border. He is the founding owner of Pajala’s sole bookstore.
Laurie Thompson has translated some 15 novels from the Swedish.
Review
"Niemi writes with real poetry....Niemi also seasons the book well with the mysticism of childhood....An exquisitely beautiful novel, artfully translated." Booklist
Review
"Haunting and glorious. Niemi's finest achievement is to have created a world poised between an adult's fantastic memories of childhood and a child's naïve dreams of his future." Los Angeles Times
Review
"[An] entrancing first novel....In Laurie Thompson's deft translation, the novel is shot through with vivid and often funny depictions of daily life in an exotic corner of the world." New York Times Book Review
Review
"A sentimental tale saved from pure nostalgia by the unfamiliarity of its setting and a nicely understated narration." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"Niemi's great talent is as a storyteller in the oral tradition....The book is filled with eccentric, grotesque, even unsavory characters, but Niemi shows large tolerance, kindly spirit and even clear pleasure in these odd neighbors." Minneapolis Star Tribune
Review
"An extraordinary novel: hilarious, ribald, obscene....I've never read anything like it." Nicci Gerrard, Observer (London)
Review
"In British translator Laurie Thompson's hands, Niemi's language is a constant, fresh poetic surprise....Even the alphabet 'a scary army of sticks and halfmoons' comes strangely alive in this marvelous book. Michael Upchurch, Seattle Times
Review
"A blissfully eccentric, fiction-enhanced memoir....His prose buzzes with wonder, fearlessness and ecstatic ignorance: the sensations of youth. Each chapter is an epic in miniature." Hugo Lindgren, The New York Times Magazine
Synopsis
Now in paperback comes Niemi's riveting and magical portrait of coming-of-age in the Arctic north of Sweden, the single bestselling book in Swedish history.
Synopsis
Popular Music from Vittula tells the fantastical story of a young boy's unordinary existence, peopled by a visiting African priest, a witch in the heart of the forest, cousins from Missouri, an old Nazi, a beautiful girl with a black Volvo, silent men and tough women, a champion-bicyclist music teacher with a thumb in the middle of his hand and, not least, on a shiny vinyl disk, the Beatles. The story unfolds in sweltering wood saunas; amidst chain thrashings and gang warfare; learning to play the guitar in the garage; over a traditional wedding meal; on the way to China; during drinking competitions; while learning secret languages, playing ice hockey surrounded by snow drifts, outsmarting mice, discovering girls, staging a first rock concert, peeing in the snow, skiing under a sparkling midnight sky.
More generally, Popular Music from Vittula offers a tender glimpse into a less trendy Sweden: Miles away from the urbane Stockholm or fashionable Malmö in the south, Vittula is almost another universe, surrounded by tundra and taiga, forest and potato field. In Vittula, one is as likely to speak Finnish as Swedish, and young boys and old folk alike may distill homemade alcohol from yeast and sugar.
Laurie Thompson's brilliant translation from the Swedish allows us to enjoy the silent, surprising beauty of Mikael Niemi's prose. Here is language that is humorous and lively and sad, an imaginative and a truly original fiction.
Synopsis
Popular Music from Vittula tells the fantastical story of a young boy's unordinary existence, peopled by a visiting African priest, a witch in the heart of the forest, cousins from Missouri, an old Nazi, a beautiful girl with a black Volvo, silent men and tough women, a champion-bicyclist music teacher with a thumb in the middle of his hand—and, not least, on a shiny vinyl disk, the Beatles.
The story unfolds in sweltering wood saunas, amidst chain thrashings and gang warfare, learning to play the guitar in the garage, over a traditional wedding meal, on the way to China, during drinking competitions, while learning secret languages, playing ice hockey surrounded by snow drifts, outsmarting mice, discovering girls, staging a first rock concert, peeing in the snow, skiing under a sparkling midnight sky. In the manner of David Mitchells Black Swan Green, Mikael Niemi tells a story of a rural Sweden at once foreign and familiar, as a magical childhood slowly fades with the seasons into adult reality.
Synopsis
Mikael Niemi's rivetting and magical portrait of coming-of-age in the near-arctic north of Sweden.
About the Author
Mikael Niemi was born in 1959 and grew up in Pajala in the northernmost part of Sweden, near the Finnish border, where he still lives. Among his published books are two collections of poetry
Näsblod under högmässan("Nosebleed during Morning Service") (1998) and
Änglar med mausergevär ("Angels with Mausers") (1989) and a young adult novel,
Kyrkdjävulen ("The Church Devil") (1994). This is his first adult novel.
Laurie Thompson has translated some fifteen novels from the Swedish, including books by Stig Dagerman, Peter Pohl, and Kjell-Olof Bornemark. He was editor of Swedish Book Review from its launch in 1983 to 2002. He lives in West Wales.