Thursday, 2 September 2021

Book: A Death in the Family: My Struggle Book 1 by Karl Ove Knausgaard

His struggle! How about mine? I was misled by the great reviews and all the plaudits that this book (most of them reprinted in the prelims) has garnered into borrowing it from the library. I've got to say, I just don't get it. The author/protagonist (as it's a memoir) is solipsist in the extreme. He has no empathy for nor understanding of others but seems to believe he has or that he at least recognises when he hasn't. It's hard to identify with such a misanthropist. The book, reasonably interesting to begin with, eventually degenerates into a version of `How Clean Is Your House' and that's not a programme I like: page after page on which bleach or detergent he's using on which part of the house and so on. Why would anyone find this interesting?

Then, very occasionally, something is described adequately, ok except that it's usually completely arbitrary and sometimes rather dull so in a way kind of pointless. He goes into details about some weird fantasy he had as a child without ever really explaining what's behind it. It's like if two people came into your house and you spent three pages describing one but said nothing about the other.

I think we're supposed to have sympathy for him because his father drank but if he were my son, I think I'd drink too and this book could drive anyone to the bottle.

Not sure how to explain all the praise it's received. Can only conclude that it's a peculiarly virulent case of the emperor's new clothes.