Rating:  Summary: Be ready to start dreaming. Review: A very interesting book with some of the most eccentric characters. You should read this book just to broaden your imagination.
Rating:  Summary: Expect the unexpected Review: Danish author Peter Hoeg is best known for "Smilla's Sense of Snow," in which he took what could have been a tepid thriller and froze it into an icy sculpture. But his most outstanding work may be "History of Danish Dreams," a magnificently dreamlike novel -- not of Danish history, but Danish dreams. The manipulative Carl Laurids was adopted by the steward of Morkhoj, a place where (the tyrannical Count has declared) time stands still. Elsewhere, little Amalie Teander is nearby when her fearsome grandmother dies; despite the fact that the old lady was illiterate, she somehow predicted the future in the newspapers... and then in her last will and testament, including how her daughter-in-law would die and how the house would be run. And then there is the sweet, innocent Anna Bak, seemingly one of God's chosen, and Adonis, who turns away from thievery. Taking place in several generations over four centuries (16th to 20th), it shifts from surreal aristocratic realms to impoverished fishing villages, as the fates of the different people intertwine. Don't expect a taut thriller like "Smilla" or a chilly sociological study like "Borderliners." Hoeg's first novel is far more nuanced and rich, with a dark, weight atmosphere hanging over the ornate language. It's a social satire, but so subtle that it only dawns on readers gradually just what he's saying through his surreal stories. This book is well-named -- "History of Danish Dreams" does, indeed, seem like a dream. It's a reflection of our own world, but twisted and darkened. At times, Hoeg lets the storyline run away from him, as if the many intricate storylines are spilling out of his hands. But he makes up for this with his outstanding, poetic descriptions of the decayed Count's lands, the dusty house of Amalie's family, and the stinking little village. His characters tend to be rather distant; there are so many of them that it's a bit difficult to get attached to them. But they are definitely interesting, from the manipulative Carl to the observant Amalie to the sweet, innocent Anna. Somehow the nastiest characters are the most fascinating, such as the Count who declares time "a common, modern invention." A strange and unique debut, "History of Danish Dreams" is Peter Hoeg's best novel to date. With its veiled social commentary and dreamlike language, it is a vivid experience in itself.
Rating:  Summary: Expect the unexpected Review: Danish author Peter Hoeg is best known for "Smilla's Sense of Snow," in which he took what could have been a tepid thriller and froze it into an icy sculpture. But his most outstanding work may be "History of Danish Dreams," a magnificently dreamlike novel -- not of Danish history, but Danish dreams. The manipulative Carl Laurids was adopted by the steward of Morkhoj, a place where (the tyrannical Count has declared) time stands still. Elsewhere, little Amalie Teander is nearby when her fearsome grandmother dies; despite the fact that the old lady was illiterate, she somehow predicted the future in the newspapers... and then in her last will and testament, including how her daughter-in-law would die and how the house would be run. And then there is the sweet, innocent Anna Bak, seemingly one of God's chosen, and Adonis, who turns away from thievery. Taking place in several generations over four centuries (16th to 20th), it shifts from surreal aristocratic realms to impoverished fishing villages, as the fates of the different people intertwine. Don't expect a taut thriller like "Smilla" or a chilly sociological study like "Borderliners." Hoeg's first novel is far more nuanced and rich, with a dark, weight atmosphere hanging over the ornate language. It's a social satire, but so subtle that it only dawns on readers gradually just what he's saying through his surreal stories. This book is well-named -- "History of Danish Dreams" does, indeed, seem like a dream. It's a reflection of our own world, but twisted and darkened. At times, Hoeg lets the storyline run away from him, as if the many intricate storylines are spilling out of his hands. But he makes up for this with his outstanding, poetic descriptions of the decayed Count's lands, the dusty house of Amalie's family, and the stinking little village. His characters tend to be rather distant; there are so many of them that it's a bit difficult to get attached to them. But they are definitely interesting, from the manipulative Carl to the observant Amalie to the sweet, innocent Anna. Somehow the nastiest characters are the most fascinating, such as the Count who declares time "a common, modern invention." A strange and unique debut, "History of Danish Dreams" is Peter Hoeg's best novel to date. With its veiled social commentary and dreamlike language, it is a vivid experience in itself.
Rating:  Summary: Justy like a dream. Review: Did you ever wake up from a weird trippy dream,and wanted to write everything down to the tiniest little detail.Well this is just like that.Ok ,so the book drags a little here and there,but it comes right back at you.The writing is very unique and picturesque.Wonderful.
Rating:  Summary: An exploration of the Danish Cultural Psyche Review: Don't think of this book as a traditional novel. There's not much traditional about it. The word "Dreams" in the title is a good choice. The many stories and characters which make up this book are like the fairie tales, fables and mythology that shape most cultures. And all these stories together start to shape a picture of what makes the Danish unique. This novel is expansive and ambitious, and even if it is uneven at times, it's characters, situations and images will stay with you for a long time Hoeg's characters are tortured and flawed but always human. He is strongest when he writes characters that are children. They will haunt you and break your heart. His prose is poetic and thick with atmosphere. The mood is dark and suffocating. And yet there are plenty of moments of humor and hope. This is one of my all time favorite novels. It's one of those books that envelopes you in it's unique world and when it let go of you, you feel changed by the experience.
Rating:  Summary: Dull and Dragging! Review: Enjoyed "Smilla's Sense of Snow," so when I saw this one on the bargain table I snatched it up. It dragged so much that I set it aside several times before managing to finish it. Guess the fact that I found this first edition hardback on the bargain table indicates how popular it was.
Rating:  Summary: About the reality of dreams. Review: Peter Hoeg speaks out loudly of what others are afraid to imagine:children have never been the little,boring angels we want them to be.But he does it in such an enchanting,powerful and imagination-capturing way that the irritating for some thought becomes a ticket to Dreamland-not only Danish but of all places and time.His book is denying all cliches presenting us with characters we 've never met before in literature , making us live and breath with them and identify with them (whether we like it or not),envying the complexity of their personalities and the dreamlike quality of their lives. Hoeg can create atmosphere as well as characters,being at the same time a sarcastic commentator of society and politics,but the latter serves also the purpose of making the fantasy-like world of his heroes more believable than anything else. It;s good to see the field of human dreams and especially that of children treated just as it deserves-no false sentiment,no out of place sarcasm. And we ,the <>,are grateful to him for his book.
Rating:  Summary: His Best Book Review: This book has glimpses of greatness, but such glimpses are too few. Much of the book makes reference to situations that are too hard for the reader to grasp or are not very well described. Taken as a whole, the book has some great characters and some interesting dialog and points. However, it drags too much and some of the storylines lose the reader's interest.
Rating:  Summary: A dreamy read Review: This book is a stunning literary accomplishment that should be much more widely known than it is. Peter Hoeg weaves this tale in a way that marries the magical realism of García Márquez with philosophical ruminations reminiscent of Kundera.This is the history of Danish dreams in the sense of hopes, of aspirations: of discussing what Danes of different classes and generations have wanted in the past two hundred years, and how these aspirations contributed to building the Danish society of today. Hoeg achieves a rare and seemingly contradictory feat: he criticizes a great many aspects of his country and its society, yet does so in a way that makes his Denmark captivating to non-Danish readers. Hoeg tells his story in a series of seven segments which relate to each other, through the lives of a cast of recurring characters and their children and grandchildren, paradigmatic of Denmark's different social classes. Hoeg brings to life the foolish 18th-century Count of Morkhoj, who one day decrees that on his estate time shall stand still forever; he gives us the Teander Rabow family, owners of a provincial newspaper whose power over their fellow townspeople is such that they print the news first and the events actually happen later, precisely at the time and in the fashion dictated by the influential journal. In one segment, Hoeg includes a recurring device in which several of the most influential figures of 19th-century Denmark --- a business tycoon, an architect, a Socialist rabble-rouser --- are secretly all siblings who have conspired to obscure their shared past as the sons of a small-time crook and a circus performer. And at the beginning and end of the story he introduces us to the devious Carl Laurids, the millionaire rogue whose underhanded schemes and shady dealings so perfectly epitomize the financial world of the twentieth century. The wisdom in Hoeg's book is not exclusive to Denmark: he speaks of the nature of "the twentieth century, where things change so rapidly that parents' experiences are totally and hopelessly outdated by the time their children have need of them." This book works on two levels, both as an entertaining family saga of men and women in their times, and as an embroidered parable of the forces behind national conscience. This is a dreamy read that will please anyone who's looking for unusual philosophical storytelling and who welcomes a book that fully engages one's mind.
Rating:  Summary: Narrative Disorientation Review: This is an exceptionally well-written book, and a well-told story. The shifting narratives add to the depth of the picture of Danish society that Hoeg is trying to draw. We see a large cross-section of social classes and psychological states as well as historical periods. This tapestry of life is often tragic and occassionally inspiring. Hoeg is assembling a collage here, so readers should not expect the gripping suspense narrative of Smilla's Sense of Snow. But readers searching for an innovative and thought-provoking novel with shifting narrative will be richly rewarded.
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