Norma

· Atlantic Books
2.0
1 review
Ebook
320
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

From the internationally acclaimed author of Purge and When the Doves Disappeared, comes a deliciously dark family drama that is a searing portrait of both the exploitation of women's bodies and the extremes to which people will go for the sake of beauty.

When Anita Naakka jumps in front of an oncoming train, her daughter, Norma, is left alone with the secret they have spent their lives hiding: Norma has supernatural hair, sensitive to the slightest changes in her mood--and the moods of those around her--moving of its own accord, corkscrewing when danger is near. And so it is her hair that alerts her, while she talks with a strange man at her mother's funeral, that her mother may not have taken her own life. Setting out to reconstruct Anita's final months--sifting through puzzling cell phone records, bank statements, video files--Norma begins to realise that her mother knew more about her hair's powers than she let on: a sinister truth beyond Norma's imagining.

Ratings and reviews

2.0
1 review
A Google user
November 1, 2017
I'm not really sure if I enjoyed this book or not to be perfectly honest. It is a strange amalgam of crime thriller and supernatural and I am not sure it really works as well as it could. There is just something missing in the characterisation with everyone from the eponymous Norma to the peripheral characters such as the challenged Helena. This did start off as 3 Stars but the more I think about it the more I realise that that is probably over-egging the pudding. The book starts with the suicide of Norma's mother and then slowly unfolds through the funeral where she meets the thoroughly unlikeable Max Lambert. Norma has "issues" with her hair, it can sense things about people and it is telling her that this man is bad news. So, she rushes home and cuts her hair and then begins to worry about the downsizing at her workplace. Really, other than her hair and her cornucopia of medicines there is nothing really interesting in the main character and you never really feel you are getting to know her. Much of the book deals with the selling of hair and baby farming, apparently being good at sourcing clients and donors for the one makes you adept at doing it for the other. However, the criminality is dealt with in such a superficial way that you get no genuine sense of menace from Alla or Lambert and his Dogs. Apparently Marion is terrified of them, particularly her step-mother and father, but the feeling never gets further off the page than the typeface. The most intriguing bits are undoubtedly the extracts from the Videos left to Norma by her mother. Here we get to finally meet the incarcerated Helena and we start to unravel the heredity of Norma's hair. A family member, Eva, had just the same fast-growing, autonomous hair but she ran away to be a Photographer's muse in the 1920s leaving behind her husband and children (one of whom just happens to be Norma's grandmother). Now Eva seems to be speaking through Helena and urging Anita into selling Norma's hair and exposing the Lambert's dealings. Apparently Eva is now trying to communicate with Norma too. A disappointing book that could have been so much more if it wasn't trying so hard to be different, or clever or maybe even statement making. It actually makes me a little mad at the opportunities that I perceive to have been missed here. I RECEIVED A FREE COPY OF THIS BOOK FROM READERS FIRST IN EXCHANGE FOR AN HONEST REVIEW.
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About the author

Sofi Oksanen is a Finnish-Estonian novelist and playwright. Purge was her first novel to appear in English. She has received numerous prizes for her work, including the Swedish Academy Nordic Prize, the Prix Femina, the Budapest Grand Prize, the European Book Prize, and the Nordic Council Literature Prize. She lives in Helsinki.

Owen F. Witesman is a professional literary translator with a master's in Finnish and Estonian area studies and a PhD in public affairs from Indiana University. He currently lives in Springville, Utah.

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