The True Deceiver (New York Review Books Classics)
D**E
Creativity vs. Pragmatism
A few weeks ago, the cover of this novel caught my attention as I was browsing here on Amazon. You could say, then, than I judged--and bought--this book based on the cover. The beautiful illustration is by none other than the novel’s author, Tove Jansson, who is famous for her series of children books about the Moomins. Jansson, a Finnish woman who wrote in Swedish, also penned a few novels, five of which are available in English. Before buying _The True Deceiver_ (1982), I checked out a copy of _The Summer Book_ (1972) from my local library, to sample the author’s prose. I was charmed by the impressionistic, episodic, and poetic musings of a young girl who spends a summer with her grandmother. I wanted more, and so I ordered _The True Deceiver_.Jansson allows us to witness the daily life of a small community. The portrayal is quite vivid for such a brief novel, so much so that, cliché as it may sound, I feel as if I had visited this town in person. The specific characters we follow closely are Katri Kling, Anna Aemeling, and Katri’s brother Mats. As the novel begins, Katri and Mats live in an attic over a store. She’s 25 and he’s 15. She’s perceived as a cynic; he’s described as “a bit simple.” (I couldn’t help thinking of Tarjei Vesaas’ _The Birds_, which I read and reviewed a few weeks ago.) Things change for the siblings when they become close to the older Anna, an illustrator of children’s books. Katri offers to help Anna manage her affairs, and the siblings soon move to Anna’s house.The novel might have been titled “Parasite,” as Katri takes over Anna’s life for her own purposes. Anna is the artist; Katri, the pragmatist. We witness the clash between the creative and the practical principles. Perhaps the best example of this occurs when Katri suggests answering the children’s letters with a generic response. Anna would take the time to answer each letter individually. To Katri, this is just a waste of time. She believes everything can be categorized, organized, simplified, and expedited. She destroys the beautiful spontaneity of life. To the pragmatist, “All art is quite useless,” though not exactly in the sense that Oscar Wilde meant it.Katri is good with numbers and seems to know everything there is to know about people. That doesn’t help her to function in society: she is an outcast. An understanding of human nature would lead one to compassion or to misanthropy; Katri is inclined towards the latter. She excels at turning people against each other. She’s the predator who observes life from a distance and is ready to pounce. “As far back as I can remember,” she says, “I’ve done nothing but wait, wait to finally act, to wager all my insight and foresight and daring, wait for the big decisive change that will set everything right” (137). Anna thinks more along these lines: “I would much rather be cheated than to go around distrusting everyone” (128). The meeting of these two seems like the perfect recipe for disaster.What, then, is Mats’ role? He seems to me like a type of synthesis. Like Anna, he draws, but he draws blueprints of boats. He is thus both artistic and pragmatic, and so he can move comfortably between the two women’s perspectives._The True Deceiver_ is a beautiful, quiet novel. The ending is masterfully understated, open but satisfying. This is not a novella, though. _The Summer Book_ is, by virtue of its episodic, repetitive structure. There is development in _The True Deceiver_, and this makes it a novel, though Jansson incorporates to it elements of the novella, to great advantage. _The Summer Book_ seems to have a wider audience, but I’ll admit I enjoyed _The True Deceiver_ more. Both books were good enough for me to be interested in reading more by Jansson.Next on my list, by the same author: the novel _Fair Play_ (1989) or the short story collection _The Woman Who Borrowed Memories_.Thanks for reading, and enjoy the book!
M**E
good read
I leave the plot up to others. I can say the writing has captured the essence of a cold Swedish Winter by a writer who grew up in a Swedish-speaking part of Finland. The translation is especially well done. The writer has written some marvelous children's stories and several adult stories. I suspect the children's story experience has led to a wonderful ability to paint scenes and give characters life. I am a fan of Nordic crime/mysteries and consider this one of the best.
D**S
Is it a nice beach read or something much more?
Isn't interesting how small books can pack as much punch and cause as much "trouble" or provocation any mega book that aspires to that?Tove Jansson's "The True Deceiver" puts us physically and psychologically into the minds and bodies of villagers in Scandanavia during a typically bleak winter. She brings us into all the small minded ambitions, misunderstandings and presumptions and judgements that preoccupy the main characters and their neighbors. She writes with sparing use of adjectives, relying on the relentless themes of winter, darkness, objectivity and it's counter part; self deception."The True Deceiver" is often said to be the dark rejoinder to "The Summer Book". I think that's right. In "The Summer Book" a wonderful grandmother treats her granddaughter with love and respect while introducing her to art and nature. Here we have the elderly children's illustrator Anna Amelin. I loved Janssen description that expose Anna perhaps more detached that friendly."PERHAPS THE REASON PEOPLE called Anna Aemelin nice was because nothing had ever forced her to exhibit malice, and because she had an uncommon ability to forget unpleasant things"In one quick snapshot doubt is raised about her character and know at best she is untested. And in comes Katri. A young woman viewed equally with respect and suspicion in town. She is driven to protect her younger brother and sees a potential means out of her poverty by working herself into Anna's life and household. But Katri views herself as honest and obsessed with seeing the world objectively. Such are the constraints as she moves to manipulate the situation for her benefit. Will she win or be outwitted? In the end will there be a winner?It's a fascinating set up. One can dwell on deeper meanings, motive and justifications. Or one can sit deep in a chair a read a story about a cold winter in a small taken and be transported to that very isolated spot. Either way it well worth the ride on the back of originality in plot, location, writing and characters.'Anna continued. "Now don't take this the wrong way, Miss Kling, but I find your way of never saying what a person expects you to say, I find it somehow appealing. In you there's no, if you'll pardon my saying so, no trace of what people call politeness ... And politeness can sometimes be almost a kind of deceit, can it not? Do you know what I mean?""Yes," said Katri. "I do."'
C**L
Book Club Material
Good example of how the human mind can be manipulated - Was a good read - not a book I would normally read. Can see this being a great discussion read
A**S
Ignorance vs. Realism
I loved this work for it's exploration of the idea of someone is completely naive to the failings of our species and the other completely jaded about it being in the same space. It really got me thinking about the superficial society that we live in and how we construct acceptable norms which so often hide the truth and reality of a situation. I thought that it read well in English and found that I couldn't put it down. Great book!
S**E
Cold and intriguing
This is an unusual story written in sparse prose that brilliantly conveys the snowy cold of a Swedish winter. It's atmospheric and compelling, but I wouldn't go so far as to describe it as a psychological thriller.The main characters are two women whose lives, apart from the isolation which affects them both, are as different as a Swedish winter from an African summer. Katya is young and clever, and lives in the village with her simple-minded but creative brother and an unhappy dog. Anna is older and wealthier, an illustrator of children's books, who lives in her family home, a place the locals have nicknamed the Rabbit House, away out of the village at the edge of the woods. From the moment Katya decides she wants to live in the Rabbit House, there develops an intriguing build-up of lies and deception.I can't say that I particularly liked the book, nor did I really warm to the characters. Katya, in particular, is someone it's hard to like and impossible to know, but despite all this it's a five-star read. If that sounds too paradoxical to be true read it and see what you think. It won't take you long as it's quite a short book.And the title is more subtly clever than at first it seems ... You'll still be thinking about it long after you've finished reading the book.
L**A
Intense and intriguing.
I was actually looking for something whimsical and or light when I chose this book. But it was (to me) a very intense and dark book. Nonetheless I found it very intriguing. I felt Tove built these characters up in a true manner, to the point of being almost disturbing.
E**W
"The wind's assault on the trees produced voices, music, distant cries..."
This is, as Ali Smith says in her introduction, an "unassuming, unexpected, powerful piece of work." Within this novel Jansson tackles, in a mood of dark existentialism, the Scandinavian winter. The novel is set in a tiny hamlet bounded by a vast lake and a deep, dark forest. Anna Armelin lives in the forest in what is known as "The Rabbit House", inside the walls have washed to a faded blue, outside the children build tunnels in the snow that only they can traverse. In a sense, every house is under siege to the children, but in particular they target Katri and her brother Mats, who, along with Anna Armelin, are at the core of this story. The village is a hotbed of vicious gossip, the main subject being Katri, who is clever and sharp, who rarely smiles and never laughs and who is accompanied everywhere by her huge Alsatian dog. The events of this novel are not earth-shaking, but one becomes embroiled in the negotiations between brother and sister and selected members of the tiny community, as Katri struggles to fulfil her dream. The writing is brilliantly stark and cool (in both senses of the word) as relationships are forged and broken apart in this beautifully crafted and compulsively readable novel.
A**E
Pyschologically challenging
This was my first encounter with Tove Jansson writing for adults, thus providing an insight into the psychology of two very strong female characters. In a way both women are 'loners', they socialise with the other inhabitants in the village because of material needs.Anna, the older woman, lives alone and has had a cossetted upbringing: she is a successful writer of childrens' books, while Katri, the younger character worries for her sibling Mats. Mats is not overbright but has a talent, as a boat designer.Katri ruthlessly controls her own life, her dog (with no name), and is unashamedly forthright to those with whom she comes in contact. Katri's inveigling herself into Anna's life and home, and their personal conflict is brilliantly played out, through Jansson's narrative, (at no time verbose). It is the reader who decides who the 'true deceiver' is, and how the women move on after the last page.
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