Every so often I come across a scene that is so potent that it lingers long after I’ve finished reading it. That’s where the idea for this feature came from. Each Monday I intend to share with you a memorable scene from one (or more) of my reads.
If you like the idea I invite you to join me in sharing a memorable scene on your blog and link to it in a comment or just share the scene in the comment itself. (Please remember to include the book’s title and author so our wishlists and TBR stacks can grow. Also, if your scene is a spoiler, please clearly mark it as one.)
This week’s scene comes from Broken by Karin Fossum, a unique thriller/mystery novel translated to English from its original Norwegian.
I am sitting in front of the computer. My fingers skate quickly across the keyboard. There are times it becomes flexible like a ribbon in my hands and I can bend and twist the language any way I please. Alvar comes up behind me, shifting nervously from one foot to the other.
“Are you really going to burden me with your sleeping problems and anxiety?†I turn around and give him a somewhat patronizing look.
“Everyone struggles with anxiety,†I say. “Can you feel how it eats away at you? In here, behind your ribs?†I tap my chest with my finger. “A cowardly rat sits in here gnawing its way through your ribs. It hurts.â€
“But I’m a decent man,†he says. “I always keep my affairs in order.â€
I turn off the computer, then turn around in my chair and look at him again. “Yes, that’s true. At the same time, you’re all alone. It’s dangerous to go through life without someone you can lean on. In certain circumstances it might well prove to be extremely dangerous for you.â€
“In certain circumstances,†he echoes, “that you are about to put me in?â€
I get up from my desk and go to my armchair, sit down, and light up a cigarette.
“What will be will be,†I say to him over my shoulder. He follows me. He stands with his hands folded. It is gray outside the windows. Heavy and wet, no hint of wind or movement.
“That rat,†I continue, “that gnaws at us all, it never feels satisfied. We constantly seek relief in every way possible. And on rare occasions it allows us a brief respite. Do you know what it’s like when everything suddenly falls into place, when that feeling floods your body? It’s like taking off from a great height. We float through the air and everything around us is warm. For a few brief seconds we think how great life can be. You’ll have such moments too, I promise you.â€
He sits down on the sofa, on the edge as usual.
“Are people supposed to settle for a few brief moments of happiness?†he asks, dismayed.
“That’s a good question. It’s up to each and every one of us to decide. The majority spend most of their day looking for some kind of relief. A cigarette, a bottle of red wine. A Cipralex, going for a run. I won’t deprive you of sleep, Alvar, I promise you. But you have come to my house. I have seen you close up, and some events are inevitable. At this point in the story I’m no longer free; there is a clear structure and I have to work within it.â€
-pg 55-6 (from the ARC)
Let me back up a little bit and mention that this is a book within a book. The author sees a line of people outside her door, each of them waiting to have their story told.
One evening, the author is awoken by one of those characters who pays her a visit and begs her to write his story because he’s worried she’ll die before she gets a chance to. However, he’s cut in front of another young woman holding a possibly-dead baby. Despite this, the author is somehow engaged by him and decides to start writing his story. During the process, like whenever she takes a break to eat or sleep or write letters to people, he pops in to chat her up about the progress of his story.
Frankly, that entire premise is the reason I decided to read this book. It sounded so fascinating that I couldn’t pass it up and so far, I’m not disappointed. This is more of a character study than a typical thriller/mystery, but I enjoy that. It’s pace is leisurely, but not slow and a few of the passages so far has made me stop to think…about life in general and writing in particular.
The book is scheduled for publication on August 1st, 2010, but it’s available for pre-order on Amazon.
# Lisette wrote on July 5, 2010 at 6:09 pm:
Whoa this book sounds. Wow I don’t even know how to put it into words. I’m very, very intrigued. It’s going on my tbr list right now.
.-= Lisette´s last blog ..Book Review- Fallen by Lauren Kate =-.
# Ann-Kat wrote on July 5, 2010 at 10:37 pm:
Yes, so far the book is rather ineffable. I thought it was a mystery at first, but as I continue reading, I’m realizing it’s actually not. It’s more like a psychological study and the character Alvar Eide is…OMG…I just want to slap some sense into him. (I don’t want to say much more because it would be a spoiler.) And the blond drug addicted girl, I seriously want to jump in the book and smack her around a little bit, too. I’ve tried feeling sorry for her, but I can’t. I really can’t.