Let the Old Dreams Die
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
August 12, 2013
In Lindqvist’s commendable first short-fiction collection, people often are not what they seem, usually to a horrifying degree. “The Border” tells of a customs agent whose relationship with a suspected smuggler uncovers extraordinary truths about the agent’s heritage. The celebrities whom a paparazzo photographer thinks he is snapping in “Itsy Bitsy” reveal pedigrees that are as eerie as they are inexplicable. A drowning victim who dies but is resuscitated in “Eternal/Love” comes back to his lover as “something else, although still in human form.” In addition to these tales of deceptive identities and their unsettling natures, the book features “Final Processing,” a sequel to Handling the Undead, and the title tale, a sequel to Let the Right One In that riffs poignantly on that novel’s romantic relationship between a young boy and a vampire girl. Segerberg’s translation is murky in places, but the originality of Lindqvist’s ideas shines through.
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