A provocative bestseller from one of Norway’s most highly-regarded novelists
Vigdis Hjorth was born in 1959. She grew up in Oslo and has lived in Copenhagen, Bergen, Switzerland and France. She is the author of over a dozen novels. She has won numerous liteary awards in Scandinavia, including the Dobloug Prize in 2018.
A real work of art ... full of little philosophical nuggets that
make you think
*Between the Covers, BBC2*
Published to a storm of controversy in Vigdis Hjorth's native
Norway in 2016, Will and Testament arrived in English this year.
The novel is a meticulously paced account of a property dispute
that bleeds poisonously back into the history of the narrator and
the family members whose squabbling over a cabin comes to seem
darkly absurd compared with the trauma she has suffered.
*New Statesman, Books of the year 2019*
A wise and stylish exploration of the impact of childhood incest on
a family in the decades following the original trauma
*Times Literary Supplement*
Unsettling, beautifully constructed
*Observer*
This was a novel that people could enjoy either as high literature
or as a work of down-and-dirty revenge. The tabloids loved it as
much as the broadsheets, and it became the bestselling novel of the
year.
*The Guardian*
In a ruthless yet patiently delivered work, Hjorth does something
that few writers achieve: Will and Testamentis both economical and
overwhelming.
*Financial Times*
Will and Testament is a reminder that it's easier to hide darkness
than face it ... Hjorth argues cogently that conflicts and
atrocities often stem from what a nation represses or denies.
*Observer*
Hypnotic
*New York Times Book Review*
Precise, contemplative, and deeply moving, it's a masterful
unpacking of the tensions, secrets, and bonds that hold a family
together.
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
Hjorth parcels out the secrets with a precision worthy of Ibsen, so
that the level of suspense is maintained up to the very last of the
343 pages.
*Aftenposten*
Readers pining for a dose of brooding Norwegian writing in the
style of Karl Ove Knausgaard may be drawn to this account of a
woman's struggle to achieve reconciliation with a family that
refuses to recognise she was the victim of abuse at the hands of
her own father
*Financial Times*
Vigdis Hjorth's new novel is furious and wise, trembling and
stringent. Wills and Testaments examines who owns the past. This is
the novel in weaponised form.
*NRK*
Its strong emotional truths take hold of you immediately - even
before the family secret's consequences are made apparent: I
dogeared page after page to mark off insights, movements,
formulations.
*Dagens Nyheter*
The strength of the novel lies in Bergljot's convincing and
continuing vulnerability, in her mixed feelings and her flaws . A
clear-eyed and convincing story of a family's doomed attempt to
reconcile and the limits of forgiveness.
*Kirkus*
Vigdis Hjorth is one of my favorite contemporary writers.
*Sheila Heti, author of Motherhood and How Should a
Person Be?*
Devastating
*Frieze*
Will and Testament is a compulsively readable novel, one that turns
questions of shame into weapons against silence.
*Paris Review*
Hjorth's thoughtful, drily funny, and often devastating novel will
leave a deep and lasting impression on readers.
*Publishers Weekly*
Compelling ... Hjorth proves brilliant at revealing the stubborn,
unredemptive quality of childhood suffering.
*Guardian*
Even in the depths of family trauma, the scent of the forest, sea
and meadow may still drift over the troubled cities and suburbs of
Norwegian fiction. That forest may be a real place. It may also, as
in Will and Testament, be a longed-for state of mind.
*Norwegian Arts*
A powerfully humane novel about inheritance, trauma and the
inheritance of trauma
*Times Literary Supplement*
An extraordinary storyteller
*LA Review of Books*
One of the year's gems in translation was Will and Testament by
Vigdis Hjorth, translated by Charlotte Barslund. A story of abuse,
inheritance and the battle for the truth among a privileged
Norwegian family, it grips like a vice while interrogating national
as well as individual self-conception.
*Guardian, Best Fiction of 2019*
Unspooling in a splenetic torrent of raw emotional intensity, [Will
and Testament] speaks to wider issues of collective traumas that
societies refuse to confront.
*Morning Star*
Add Vigdis Hjorth to the growing list of writers of significant
autofiction, reality literature whose characters depend on
recognizable people and actual situations. Like Karl Ove
Knausgaard's monumental six volumes of the autobiographically
inspired My Struggle and Elena Ferrante's indelible four-volume
Neapolitan series (beginning with My Brilliant Friend), Hjorth's
Will and Testament brilliantly examines the troubled life
occasioned by recovered memories of a traumatic personal event.
*World Literature Today*
A curious and very good short novel.
*Scotsman*
The political is never far from the raw psychic immediacy of
Hjorth's narrative...That Hjorth underpins her novel about the
abandonment of psychical and familial security with this mention of
social provision is no accident. In her writing, both
psychoanalysis and a politics of the left are urgent and
necessary.
*Parapraxis Magazine*
An elegant yet excoriating study in negative space.
*Times Literary Supplement, Books of the Year 2024*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |