Throwback Thursday: The Sixteen Trees of the Somme by Lars Mytting

ThrowbackThursday

Throwback Thursday is a weekly meme originally created by Renee at It’s Book Talk.  It’s designed as an opportunity to share old favourites as well as books that we’ve finally got around to reading that were published over a year ago.

Today I’m revisiting a fabulous book I reviewed when it was first published in August 2017, The Sixteen Trees of the Somme by Lars Mytting (translated by Paul Russell Garrett).  The book was published in paperback earlier this week, with a new cover design.  You can find purchase links below.   The Sixteen Trees of the Somme is also the Waterstones Fiction Book of the Month for October 2018.


The Sixteen Trees of the Somme PBAbout the Book

Edvard grows up on a remote mountain farmstead in Norway with his taciturn grandfather, Sverre. The death of his parents, when he was three years old, has always been shrouded in mystery – he has never been told how or where it took place and has only a distant memory of his mother.

But he knows that the fate of his grandfather’s brother, Einar, is somehow bound up with this mystery. One day a coffin is delivered for his grandfather long before his death – a meticulous, beautiful piece of craftsmanship. Perhaps Einar is not dead after all.

Edvard’s desperate quest to unlock the family’s tragic secrets takes him on a long journey – from Norway to the Shetlands, and to the battlefields of France – to the discovery of a very unusual inheritance. The Sixteen Trees of the Somme is about the love of wood and finding your own self, a beautifully intricate and moving tale that spans an entire century.

Format: Paperback  (416 pp.)                                     Publisher: MacLehose Press
Published
: 1st October 2018 [10th August 2017]  Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  | WaterstonesHive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Sixteen Trees of the Somme  on Goodreads


My Review

The death of Edvard’s grandfather, Bestefar, and the facts that come to light as a result, change everything for Edvard. They see him embark on a journey that will take him away from the isolated Nowegian farm where he has grown up to the Shetlands and France as he searches for the truth about the cause of his parents’ death and the four days afterwards when he was missing. It also stirs up vague fragments of memories – a scent, the sound of a voice, the texture of a fabric, a discarded toy – that don’t make any sense but convince Edvard that he needs to find out more about his parents’ death.

‘Because there was something about Mamma and Pappa’s story that was stirring, quietly, like a viper in the grass.’

As is often the case when unearthing secrets from the past, Edvard is forced to confront unwelcome possibilities and make agonising choices. Edvard’s search reaches back in time to WW1 and WW2, bringing to light painful facts from the past – death, injury, separation and betrayal – but also revealing stories of courage, determination and devotion. It provokes questions such as whether it is better sometimes not to know the truth, to be careful what you wish for, that actions have consequences even if unintended, and the fulfilment you seek may be closer to home than you think.

I found the story absolutely enthralling and I loved the fantastic sense of place created in each location. From the author’s beautiful, heartfelt descriptions, I felt as if I could look out my own window and see the farm in Norway laid out before me.

‘Redcurrant bushes dense with berries, the flag-stoned path leading to the swimming hole at the river, the creek which cut through the potato fields and disappeared from sight behind the barn. The fruit trees, the pea pods that dangled like half moons when we got close to them, so plentiful that we could fill up on them without taking a step. The dark-blue fruit of the plum trees, the sagging raspberry bushes just waiting for us to quickly fill two small plates and fetch some caster sugar and cream.’

In particular, I loved the way the author captured the remote beauty of the Shetlands and the sense of a community where everyone knows what goes on, who’s arrived on the ferry, whose car has just passed them on the road. The author roots the various parts of the story each in their distinct time, in particular, using popular music as the background to Edvard’s journey. (I get the impression the author is a bit of a music fan, perhaps attracted at some point in his life to a girl by the way she browses in a record shop.)

At times, Edvard feels as if he has come to a dead-end in his search but still he continues searching for clues, motivated by curiosity but also by a sense of obligation to the dead – those known to him and those victims of two world wars unknown to him: ‘I wanted to be someone the dead could rely on.’

As the author of the left-field hit, Norwegian Wood: Chopping, Stacking and Drying Wood the Scandinavian Way (now also an activity book), it’s no surprise that wood is at the heart of the story. It is part of the plot in a number of ways – in fact, more and more ways as the story progresses – but it is also celebrated in the book for its form, history and beauty. Similarly, there is real regard for the craftsmanship that can fashion a piece of wood into an object of beauty, utility or religious symbolism.

The Sixteen Trees of the Somme has a compelling, enthralling story line with wonderfully atmospheric settings and well-developed characters. I was completely immersed in Edvard’s search for the truth about his parents’ death; like him, all the time fearing the dark secrets he might uncover but compelled to find out nonetheless. A fantastic book, highly recommended.

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of NetGalley and publishers Quercus Books/MacLehose Press.


LarsMyttingAbout the Author

Lars Mytting, a novelist and journalist, was born in Fåvang, Norway, in 1968. His novel The Sixteen Trees of the Somme was awarded the Norwegian National Booksellers’ Award and has been bought for film. Norwegian Wood: Chopping, Stacking and Drying Wood the Scandinavian Way has become an international bestseller and was the Bookseller Industry Awards Non-Fiction Book of the Year 2016.

(Photo credit: Goodreads Author Page)

Connect with Lars

Website | Goodreads

Throwback Thursday: A Countess in Limbo by Olga Hendrikoff & Sue Carscallen

ThrowbackThursday

Throwback Thursday is a weekly meme originally created by Renee at It’s Book Talk.  It’s designed as an opportunity to share old favourites as well as books that we’ve finally got around to reading that were published over a year ago.

I recently took part in the blog tour for A Romanov Empress by C. W. Gortner, the fictionalised story of the life of Maria Feodorovna, mother of Nicholas II, the last Tsar of Russia.    Whilst reading the book, it reminded me of a fascinating memoir I read in 2017 by a woman who lived through some of that turbulent period in Russian history.  Called A Countess in Limbo: Diaries in War & Revolution, it recounts the experiences of Countess Olga “Lala” Hendrikoff based on her personal journals collected and translated by her great niece, Sue Carscallen.  To read a wonderful interview with Sue about her memories of Olga and the process of writing the book, click here.

A Countess in Limbo was published in November 2016 by Archway Publishing and you can find purchase links below.


CountessAbout the Book

Countess Olga “Lala” Hendrikoff was born into the Russian aristocracy, serving as lady-in-waiting to the empresses and enjoying a life of great privilege. But on the eve of her wedding in 1914 came the first rumours of an impending war – a war that would change her life forever and force her to flee her country as a stateless person with no country to call home.  Spanning two of the most turbulent times in modern history—World War I in Russia and World War II in Paris – Countess Hendrikoff’s journals demonstrate the uncertainty, horror, and hope of daily life in the midst of turmoil. Her razor-sharp insight, wit, and sense of humour create a fascinating eyewitness account of the Russian Revolution and the occupation and liberation of Paris.

Format: ebook (337 pp.)                           Publisher: Archway Publishing
Published: 3rd November 2016             Genre: Memoir, History, Non-Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find A Countess in Limbo on Goodreads


My Review

I found these journals absolutely fascinating and I was amazed how a woman could live through such upheaval, struggle, loss and privation and still provide such an objective commentary on events, managing to see the good – and bad – on both sides.

In the first section, the young Olga recounts some of her experiences living in Russia at the outbreak of World War I.  There are touching scenes, such as when she and her mother witness the departure of her younger brother to join the army. ‘To the strains of martial music, the train, illuminated by the last rays of the setting sun, started pulling away from the platform and soon vanished in the evening darkness.  With long-repressed tears flowing without measure, my mother and I stood on the platform for a few more minutes.’

Olga did not keep journals throughout her life – or at least, none remain – so there are gaps where only her great niece’s research can try to provide welcome answers.  One such mystery is the circumstances around the ending of her marriage after only three years.

The sections of the book containing the journals Olga Hendrikoff kept during World War 2, covering the onset of war, the occupation of France and its liberation, I found particularly compelling.  Throughout there is a sense of incredulity that nations should so quickly repeat the mistakes of history.  ‘Another war with Germany seems incredible to me when no-one has yet forgotten the last one.’  Later she observes: ‘I often wake up in the morning thinking I have had a bad dream – the war, the departure of friends and relatives…  The first few days after the war was declared, it was if I was stunned.  I could not bring myself to believe that the country I live in is really at war.’

Olga documents the daily struggle to find food, fuel to keep warm and employment so that items only available on the thriving black market can be purchased.  She vividly describes how the German advance into France provokes the desperate flight of people.  ‘The route nationale is still clogged with refugees who make use of any means of locomotion: men on bicycles, women on foot pushing baby carriages, babies in wheelbarrows pulled like trailers by bicycles, mule- or horse-drawn carriages, strollers…in a word, anything on wheels, anything that rolls, has been mobilised for the exodus.’

The liberation of Paris brings no end to the food shortages, power cuts and daily struggle.  It also brings something worse – reprisals against those deemed to have been collaborators.  ‘In the troubled times we are going through, alas, the spirit of personal vengeance is naturally given free rein.’

Olga becomes one of hundreds of thousands stateless émigrés, in her case unable to return to Russia following the revolution and its transformation into the Soviet Union.   However, she never loses her affection for her homeland, which she looks back on fondly.  ‘Would it suddenly be possible to go back to your own country and see Russian forests again, the rivers you knew as a child, the landscapes you still hold in your heart?’ In the end, economic pressures force her to leave France and, since a return to Russia is impossible, she embarks for America where she spent the remainder of her long life.

Countess Hendrikoff was clearly a remarkable woman with wit, intelligence, resilience, compassion for others and a relentless determination to survive.  It is wonderful that her journals survive in order that modern readers can share her experiences and her admirable outlook on life.  There is so much more that I could mention about this book but I will simply urge you to read it for yourself.  One final quotation, should you need more persuading: ‘All war seems absurd to me anyway.  The victors often lose in the exchange, and the vanquished think only of revenge.’

I received a review copy courtesy of the author and publishers, Archway Publishing, in return for an honest review.

In three words: Enthralling, moving, inspirational

Try something similar… The Romanov Empress by C. W. Gortner (read my review here)

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CarscallenAbout the Authors

Olga Hendrikoff was born in 1892 in Voronezh, Russia, and attended the famous Smolny Institute. In 1914, she married Count Peter Hendrikoff just as World War I began.  In the ensuing years, Hendrikoff lived in Constantinople, Rome, Paris, and Philadelphia. She spent her last 20 years in Calgary. She died in 1987.

Sue Carscallen spent 20 years with Olga Hendrikoff before her great aunt’s passing in 1987.  Carscallen stumbled upon Hendrikoff’s diaries hidden in a trunk at her great aunt’s Calgary home.  Over time she unraveled the mysteries hidden in the manuscripts, travelling to France and Russia to supplement her research into Hendrikoff’s life.  Today, Carscallen resides in Calgary.

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