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  • Published: 30 November 2011
  • ISBN: 9781448113767
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 192

Snow




The first novel to be published in Britain by one of Sweden's most important young writers

'The sky was now a block of darkness, punctured only by driving snow. The stars had gone out, the king was dead. And the wound on his arm refused to heal.' So begins Snow, the first novel by Ellen Mattson to be published in Britain - a brilliant exploration of an individual's codes of ethics and honour in the face of political and social collapse.

The man is Jakob Torn, a small-town apothecary, stumbling drunkenly through the streets, a refugee from his own home, carrying a deep stab-wound inflicted by his wife. He does not understand what brought on this sudden violence, any more than he can come to terms with the death, in battle, of his king. When the town begins to fill with the starving, frostbitten remnants of the defeated army, and Jakob is conscripted into helping to embalm the king's body, all his certainties are called into question.

Though set in 1718 in the west coast of Sweden, Snow is a profoundly modern and universal novel, interested less in the real-life historical drama that forms the backdrop than in the emotional and moral dilemma of Jakob Torn - a simple, loyal, honourable man who finds himself the damaged centre of a collapsing world.

  • Published: 30 November 2011
  • ISBN: 9781448113767
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 192

About the author

Ellen Mattson

Ellen Mattson was born in 1962 on Sweden's west coast, and is the daughter of children's author Ollo Mattson. Regarded as one of Sweden's most important young writers and critics, she has published five works of fiction. Her novel, Snow, was published by Cape in 2005, the first of Mattson's works to be published in Britain. The translation by Sarah Death won the Society of Authors Bernard Shaw Prize for Swedish translation.

Praise for Snow

Beautifully measured and unadorned, Snow does not burden itself as a conventional "historical novel"; this is a more subtle thing, and I thought of Breughel, Bergman and Kafka.

Alan Warner

Mattson produces some astonishing bursts of language, the most tangible sensations and more than a few resonant ideas.

Guardian

A subtle, delicate novel... Mattson's powerful descriptive prose concerns itself with the unquenchable human lust for the warmth hidden beneath the icy cold banalities of everyday life.

Glasgow Herald

Prose of a solemn and resonant beauty.

Times Literary Supplement
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