Klik på en miniature for at gå til Google Books
Indlæser... Beartown: A Novel (udgave 2018)af Fredrik Backman (Forfatter)
Work InformationBeartown af Fredrik Backman
» 24 mere Books Read in 2019 (199) Books Read in 2021 (713) Top Five Books of 2018 (531) Small Town Fiction (20) Books Read in 2018 (738) Five star books (428) Carole's List (226) Books Read in 2022 (2,964) FAB 2023 (8) Everand 2023 (20) READ in 2023 (90) To Read (125) Animals in the Title (279) Books Read in 2017 (4,195) Indlæser...
Bliv medlem af LibraryThing for at finde ud af, om du vil kunne lide denne bog. Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. Nearly abandoned due to too much sporting detail until the story developed and I realised how powerful this tale was. Reminded me a little of when I had to study Williamson’s play “The Club,” all those years ago, learning about the worst sides of sporting clubs. The small town, bigoted, win at all costs mentality is so well drawn here. This reminded me of why I loathe the jingoistic “Aussie, Aussie, Aussie” chant and what it can symbolise. Nearly 4 stars but needed some editing to shorten the novel. Beartown tells the story of teenagers coming of age in a small Swedish town where ice hockey is the main pastime for the highschool players and the entire town who come to watch and cheer on the towns team. While the story was ok, particularly the class issues of the haves vs the have nots. I became bored with the detail with which the hockeygames were detailed. I would give this book 10 stars if I could. Wow. Just wow. I’ve been trying to figure out how to explain what makes this book so incredibly special. The story itself isn’t especially unique and the beginning does read a bit slow...but, wow, the writing is so emotional. Every sentence makes you feel like you’re that character experiencing all of it. The character development is great. I want to know more about all of them and yet I feel like I do know them. And everything feels so real...thoughts that the characters had, things that were said, how they were said, reactions to different events...it didn’t feel like a story, it felt like I was experiencing it all with real people. Wonderful, wonderful book and I look forward to reading more by this author. A fantastic reading experience. I haven’t heard of this writer before, so Bear Town was a pleasant surprise. This is a societal case study on humanity, its complex social interactions and its derivative subjective moralities. The setting is what I assume to be a Scandinavian country with people “as tough as the forest - as hard as the ice” . And let me tell you, the author brings the people of Bear Town alive just A fantastic reading experience. I haven’t heard of this writer before, so Bear Town was a pleasant surprise. This is a societal case study on humanity, its complex social interactions and its derivative subjective moralities. The setting is what I assume to be a Scandinavian country with people “as tough as the forest - as hard as the ice” . And let me tell you, the author brings the people of Bear Town as alive as they were real - A people whose universe revolves around ice hockey and are willing to sacrifice anything to the altar of puck and skates. Yet, this is not sports fiction or mystery writing. First and foremost I would categorize Fredrick Backman as a work of literature. It is the quality of his writing and the meaningful interaction of his characters that manages to elevate his work beyond mere entertainment fiction. Well done Mr. Bachmann. as they were real - A people whose universe revolves around ice hockey and are willing to sacrifice anything to the altar of puck and skates. Yet, this is not sports fiction or mystery writing. First and foremost I would categorize Fredrick Backman as a work of literature. It is the quality of his writing and the meaningful interaction of his characters that manages to elevate his work beyond mere entertainment fiction. Well done Mr. Bachmann. A fantastic reading experience. I haven’t heard of this writer before, so Bear Town was a pleasant surprise. This is a societal case study on humanity, its complex social interactions and its derivative subjective moralities. The setting is what I assume to be a Scandinavian country with people “as tough as the forest - as hard as the ice” . And let me tell you, the author brings the people of Bear Town as alive as they were real - A people whose universe revolves around ice hockey and are willing to sacrifice anything to the altar of puck and skates. Yet, this is not sports fiction or mystery writing. First and foremost, I would categorize Fredrick Backman as a work of literature. It is the quality of his writing and the meaningful interaction of his characters that manages to elevate his work beyond mere entertainment fiction. Well done Mr. Bachmann.
The bestselling author of A Man Called Ove tells a poignant story of a hockey town paralyzed by scandal. Jobs are disappearing and Beartown is slowly dying, so for its citizens, hockey is everything. Backman asks, “Why does everyone care about hockey? Because hockey tells stories.” This is the story not just of hockey, but of a 15-year-old named Maya Andersson, whose father, Peter, the general manager of the hockey club, loves hockey, but loves his family more. Seventeen-year-old Kevin Erdahl is the star of Beartown, with a chance to go professional. One night, after a huge win, Maya goes to a raucous party at Kevin’s house and is thrilled at his attention, but things get out of hand, and what takes place changes Beartown forever. Lest readers think hockey is the star here, it’s Backman’s rich characters that steal the show, and his deft handling of tragedy and its effects on an insular town. While the story is dark at times, love, sacrifice, and the bonds of friendship and family shine through, ultimately offering hope and even redemption. Backman veers close to the saccharine, but readers may be too spellbound to notice. Belongs to SeriesBeartown (1) Indeholdt iHæderspriserDistinctionsNotable Lists
Velkommen til Bjørneby; en by med sne og is og mørke og arbejdsløshed. Velkommen til byens ishockey-klub; byens hjerteblod og dens eksistensberettigelse. En fortælling om drømme, kampe, sammenhold og loyalitet, men også fortællingen om en voldtægt, der ændrer en hel by. No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsIngenPopulære omslag
Google Books — Indlæser... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)839.73Literature German literature and literatures of related languages Other Germanic literatures Swedish literature Swedish fictionLC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:
Er det dig?Bliv LibraryThing-forfatter. |
Beartown is all things hockey. All. Things. But in Beartown the players are only males, there is no female club. As with all things where there is a gender divide and where so much weight is placed onto the thing divided, the egos are huge, the entitlement is enormous, and coverups in the name of the club, a known given.
When the general manager’s daughter is raped by the star player of the Beartown hockey team, lines are drawn, conjectures formed, socioeconomics defined, and genders separated, read: if you were on the hockey team, you prevailed.
Fredrik Backman masterfully describes the intricacies of how the herd mentality works, how the good-ole-boys club rules, and how even in today’s age, if you aren’t in the right group, no amount of truth, rightness, or witnesses will bring justice.
Beartown is raw and difficult at many points. It brings to light how easy the disgusting, vile side of humans can boil to the surface, be it the child who commits the wrong, or the parent who defends them to the death, even when the truth is known.
Beneath the major theme, runs many additional, equally as important themes that Backman weaves and fleshes out throughout the gentle, slow-pace that makes Beartown unputdownable. I do not regret the weekend I gave to it.
Few novels deserve a MUST READ - Beartown is one of the few. ( )