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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
poignant and intimate,
This review is from: The True Deceiver (Paperback)
I found this book poignant, an excellent book that inspires self -reflection. Great for curling up in bed in the cold of winter and reading one small chapter per evening. Tove Jansson once again creates characters that reflect many people's positive and negative characteristics..... she has an excellent eye for truthful perspective. Anyone that has lived in a small town will relate to this book.
5.0 out of 5 stars
How to influence people, but not necessarily make friends,
This review is from: The True Deceiver (Paperback)
A book for savouring. I didn't want it to end, ever. I read it long enough ago that I've lost some of the details but every once in a while a person in the real world will do or say something which reminds me of another person -- yes, person -- in The True Deceiver. Interestingly, I lent it to a friend who loathed it but admitted she couldn't stop reading it. So, I read it again. This process told me much about my friend and even more about me.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews) 8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Perfect Book,
By Barbara Farrelly - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The True Deceiver (Paperback)
This is the great Finnish writer Tove Jansson at the height of her powers in a haunting novel which invites comparisons with Australia's Elizabeth Jolley. Being able to read Jansson's work in English is like "discovering buried treasure", according to the introduction to the novel by Ali Smith. And while I agree, I suggest you read this after you've finished the story, not before. It's a spoiler. Two outcasts in a blue-eyed, snow covered world are yellow-eyed Katri Kling and her slow lumbering brother Mat who live in a single room above a shop with a fierce dog Katri doesn't bother to name. The wolfish Katri sets her sights on wealthy old Anna Aemelin, a children's book illustrator who lives alone in a mansion. Anna paints the forest floor and fills her exquisite illustrations with flowery rabbits. And so the wolf and the bunny begin a dance over the long dark winter months, so skillfully evoked by this master storyteller. Anna is careless about money; Katri a penny-pincher who contrives for herself and her brother to live with the artist and create a dependency. Clever Katri soon shows arty Anna how everyone is cheating her. But honesty without compassion is indeed brutality. "For the first time in her life, Anna became distrustful. She went around brooding about all of them - neighbours, publishers, innocent little children." Anna loses her treasured peace of mind and her child-like trust. She can no longer find creative inspiration instead she sees betrayal everywhere, even in the letters of her once cherished parents. Katri takes Anna's old furniture and leaves it in a huge pile on the snow, waiting for the spring melt to claim it. It sits there like a menace in the woods. But who is lying to whom? And does the ends justify the means? This is a perfect book. 2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"It was an ordinary dark winter morning, and snow was still falling",
By John Sollami - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The True Deceiver (Paperback)
Months of snow, endlessly falling, piling up, being shoveled, falling again. A cover over everything and a symbolic blanket over all the people in the village whose true feelings lie buried beneath its icy threads. Only one villager seems to remain true to her inner self: Katri Kling. She has yellow eyes and keeps company with a silent wolfish dog who stays at her side and obeys only her. Her one soft spot is her love of her innocent slow-witted little brother Mats. She wants to give him something grand but needs money. Coolly calculating, Katri focuses on the rich lady artist living alone deep in the woods, in the rabbit house, Anna. Katri moves in, literally and figuratively. She uses her cold, brilliant mind to show Anna all the ugliness in people, and therein lies the struggle in this short, precisely written novel. Heavily laden with symbols and double meanings, this novel is a fine piece of literature, thought provoking, and well worth the brief time it takes to read. Highly recommended.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Small Psychological Gem,
By Ken C. - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The True Deceiver (Paperback)
If you're a fan of psychological studies, you owe THE TRUE DECEIVER a look. Set in Sweden in the first half of the 20th century, the book offers a battle of wills that you don't even realize is happening at times, it's so subtle. Katri Kling becomes a care-taker for the famous children's book illustrator, Anna Aemilin, and it sets the small-town tongues wagging. "They make an odd couple, after all, so what's afoot?" seems to be the question of the moment.
Katri is logical to a fault and has little patience for the "games people play." She plays ice to emotional Anna's fire. In fact, not only is Anna well-versed in the games people play, she has practically written her own game. Throw into this face-off two wildcards: Katri's "simple-minded" brother, Mats, and her dog with no-name (which Anna initially fears and then wins over) and you have the cast for a mimimalist drama set against a relentless background of snow, ice, and winter. Spring does come, however, and it plays a decided role in the denouement. When you reach it, you'll wonder how Tove Jansson pulls it off. It sure SEEMS like not much is happening -- and yet, all along, something is. A metaphorical chess match, in fact, one you have to sit back and admire because it could have come across as so melodramatic and treacly in the wrong hands. Best of all? The matter of who the "true deceiver" is remains subject to debate, even after the end. I love books like that, because they leave you thinking, engaging in your own internal debates. Good literature -- even smaller examples like this -- should do just that, no? |
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