A Man Called Ove A Novel, by Fredrik Backman

Pictures of Fredrik Backman  & Ove's Auto preferance the Saab

 

 

Ove’s story is heartbreaking, and it is very funny. It is filled with diverse characters, including the cat. Ove is Swedish and the story takes place in Sweden. It is a book you will not want to put down and one that will make you laugh out loud.

Both growing up as a child, and then later as an adult, Ove is described as a curmudgeon. He has strict principles, fixed routines and the image of a crusty old man who is ill-tempered, but this image is only true at first glance.

With a closer look you find that he has a heart of gold. Much of what is good in Ove was brought out by his wife, Sonji, who comes into his life and balances his pessimism with her optimism and warmth. She is really the opposite of Ove in most every way, but she is as dedicated to Ove as he is to her.

Driving a Saab is a litmus test for Ove and if you do drive one your more than ok. If you drive a Volvo, BMW or foreign car, it can be a reason for not speaking.

Ove’s wife dies, and it is heartbreaking.  It takes a lot of time but it is a woman who again turns him around, for a second time.  Parvaneh moves, with her husband and children, next door.  His relationship with their children is very touching.

The book is an exploration of how one life impacts so many others and is well worth reading.

About the Author

Fredrik Backman grew up in Sweden. He has been writing for Helsingborgs Dagblad and Moore Magazine in Sweden. His first book was "A Man Called Ove" and was published in 2012. It was adapted into a film which came out in December 2015.

The River of Doubt, by Candice Millard

Theordore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey

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After Teddy Roosevelt, the 26th U.S. president, failed his re-election effort he decided to have a great adventure. It had to be unique and something no one else had done. Exploring an uncharted river in South America fit his needs well. 

The River of Doubt is a black uncharted tributary of the Amazon that snakes through one of the most treacherous jungles in the world. The rain forest was anything but easy to deal with.
He took his son Kermit and they found an experienced guide, Candido Rondon, and crew. 

Candice Millard said, "When he wasn't too sick to sit up, Roosevelt sought comfort and distraction in the world that he knew best: his library. For his trip to Africa, he had spent months choosing the books that he would take with him, ordering special volumes that had been beautifully bound in pigskin, with type reduced to the smallest legible size, so that the books would be as light as possible."

Vipers, piranhas, poisonous plants, insect swarms were all serious threats as were Indians armed with poison tipped arrows. 

Roosevelt ended his journey sick with fever having lost 1/4 of his body weight. It was indeed Teddy Roosevelt’s darkest journey.

Quotes

“Theodore you have the mind but you have not the body, and without the help of the body the mind cannot go as far as it should. I am giving you the tools, but it is up to you to make your body.” 

“In its intense and remorseless competition for every available nutrient, the Amazon offered little just for the taking.” 

“Rhythmic eddies in the water betrayed the passage of anacondas, which can weigh as much as five hundred pounds.” 

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