Fiction read is not my cup of tea. But every once in a while you come across a book that gets a certain word-of-mouth and reaches you in a manner that's as good as destiny. And eventually lives up to its promise of thrill. I just got finished with The Girl with a Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson. Its a best seller. That overly abused word. Though the good part is if most people like it, there is a strong chance that you will like it too. I did. It could have been tough to live up to all the anticipation, but it was not disappointing at all. In fact it was quite complete. Not a word i thought i would use to describe a book - complete. But it seemed like that in the end.
Firstly this book evaded me a lot. I have never had a previous experience of walking into two bookstores and being told that the book i am looking for is out of stock. This is after a certain person i met hyped it up with stories of how this book,which is part 1 of 3 books written, was published after author died and then it went on to become a best seller. All of which is true. Eventually a quaint book store, and not the first choice commercial store, is where i managed to find it. Ironically i had turned this book down few months ago at the very same "first choice commercial book-store" because i found the title and cover too sleaze. Which i guess still holds true. The trivia around it that i discovered later took me back to looking for it. And that i mentioned before.
By the virtue of being written originally in Swedish itself, it presents a certain freshness in approach. I was looking forward to that - world from the eyes of a non-American. And it was refreshing . I was not sure how well the title justified the story. The girl is important, more than her tattoo, which does not get more than two mentions in the entire 550 page book. My trivia source had also added how he wished to have a girlfriend like her - Lisbeth Salander (one with the dragon tattoo).
But there is more to it that that. That too got answered when i later discovered that the literal translation of the Swedish title was - Men who hate women. That, mind you, is what captures the essence of the book. I agree with that title it would not have been a very exciting book to lift up a bookshelf . But it did summarise the book. Men, i never imagined, could be that twisted, even in imagination to treat women in a manner that they have been depicted in this story. Quite rare, and difficult to imagine. But for as many Saints there must be as many Sick....and how.
That apart, there was also an element of detailing in the lives of every character. Not your common stereotype of people but from some very unique back-grounds,or at times even no back grounds. It's interesting how these complex characters are created in the book even without delving much into their pasts. It is probably the quality of any good fiction, going into details of every character. For my lack of much fiction experience i would say this book created very elaborate descriptions that went beyond the plot and yet kept the interest to the levels of being un-put-downable. It had a TV series like quality to it, with some equally interesting sub-plots within the key plot. Not much of a TV series buff i am, so its heartening to see that this came as a book before the TV guys caught hold of it.
Eventually every crime-fiction will have a culprit and after an age of reading its really difficult to come to the end of these books not having once guessed it right. After all you almost put them all under the scanner. And then there are the obvious ones that are pushed up as likely culprits who we smartly rule out, playing right by the author's plan. And in all this, if the plot still throws in a surprise, you consider it money's worth. I did too, find this a worthy buy.
The book grows beautifully into your imagination and curiosity. Though i could not get accustomed to the number of times they drank coffee. There is even one mention of overdoing it, but the context is not exactly the same. More of something that invokes - "i thought you were used to so much coffee by now!?". There must be a thing about Swedes and coffee. Need to check that. Another thing one could not help but notice is Author's infatuation with Apple computers. This better not be another paid form of advertising. Trust me, i can write an award winning Advertising case of how "the features of the brand were seamlessly (& innovatively)integrated into the story to make the brand come alive and communicate to multi-profiled consumers". His detailing of benefits and configuration have left me wondering on the intent. Either this is his passion or the marketers of Coffee Board and Apple computers have made path breaking ventures in Advertising.
While i agree with the adjectives that have been use to describe the book like - intelligent, complex, gripping and intriguing characters, all of which seem to be true, specially the last one. What i wanted to add to that is it was rather complete. And this in spite of the fact that there are two sequels to it. Complete would be a difficult word to define, but probably easier if i explain in the context of what others don't do or what we mostly yearn for. It is more. This book does not end after it ends, it goes on to show some more. Like how we wish after a movie, to see some more of happy ending, to not just leave us on a high, but spend a little time celebrating or just little closures here and there. This book does that. It completes it. It slowly brings you back to normal without getting you bored. And i liked it for that.
I am on to reading part two now - The Girl who played with fire. After a point i don't know how much these character will keep my interest. But for the time being it seems worth.
i'm not good at reading these 'part-of-a-series' books. i don't find anyone that interesting to retain my interest for an entire series. not even harry potter. the only of the type i read was LOTR... and that was partly coz i was influenced enough to be a part of that "cult" fever. but more on that some other time. :)
ReplyDeleteas you know, i love fiction...relatable, interesting, simple. that's what i love about almost all things! :)
though i haven't read the book yet, i liked your review. makes me want to read it. you should do this more often.
p.s.: you'd be surprised at how many ppl would find the 'men who hate women' title interesting! ;)
Agree, series can get repetitive. Solid character building required i guess, to be able to attach ourselves to them.
ReplyDeleteWas trying my best to not make it a review. More of an experience. In midst of debating on who has the right to critique a book.
Men who hate women are plenty, coming to think of it. Maybe it needs to add Sadistic before Men to the title. Read it, you will know.
There is more to it than that though. Men who love women as well :)
who should critique is a never-ending discussion. be it films or books.
ReplyDeletei don't read reviews unless i know the person behind it. that's the only time i 'get' what's written. i'm rather daft that way! :)
will try and pick it up after march 6.
and i meant you should blog more often.
thanks...not much of a blogger i am..but will try.
ReplyDelete