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Search tags: Tove-Jansson
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review 2020-04-05 00:00
Fair Play (New York Review Books Classics)
Fair Play (New York Review Books Classics) - Tove Jansson,Thomas Teal,Ali Smith A small & very precious book. Heartfelt, tender, fiery, inquisitive. For everyone - especially every creative person - who wants to grow old with their best friends.

I don't know Tove Jansson except as a writer of short stories and she is absolutely worth getting to know this way. If you're one of my best friends, please read this immediately.
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review 2019-12-31 19:58
Moomin: The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip, Vol. 1 - Tove Jansson
Moomin: The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip, Vol. 1 - Tove Jansson

Embarking on my Moominread.
Some time back I read a book of short bios of kick-ass women, that included Jansson. And then, the moomins are so freaking cute. Plus Jansson lived in Finland which is present in my mind since getting hooked on the ice hockey. so, I decided to do some further exploration before I wrote the books off as not for me.
I like the eccentric family of bohemians and their madcap adventures, sort of. I love that there are all these different-looking creatures and that Moomin seems to accept them as relatives or just as people without question. And the moomins are hella cute.
But the story-lines are predictable, and the dialogue isn't especially funny, and the convention of making every noun Moominnoun wearies me. So while I can recognize the need for cuteness after horror, and for acceptance after exclusion, I'm still not a fan. I have two of the novels in the queue, so we'll see if those work better for me.
If not I suppose I will stick with the coloring book. Or go back to Calvin and Hobbes which I am appreciating more at the moment.

And with that I am caught up with reviewing my holiday reading. Now I'm behind on everyone else's reviews, which makes a nice change.

Library copy

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review 2019-06-24 13:38
The Summer Book by Tove Jansson
The Summer Book - Esther Freud,Thomas Teal,Tove Jansson

I liked this, but didn't love it. Sorry, B.T. Because I write in a completely different style to the one used here I sometimes find books that indulge in a heavy-handed approach to description a little slow. I loved the relationship between the grandmother and Sophia, those were my favourite bits. I only wish there'd been more of them. Sophia was such a precocious child with a hilarious temperament I longed for more from her. Perhaps if the book had been longer I may have got my wish. It was a mere 120 pages. While the descriptive prose were lovely, I felt there were too many of them and the relationship between Sophia and her grandmother was neglected a tad. The descriptive passages did, however, mean that the book was full of excellent imagery. I felt like I could see the island and breath the air. I would definitely recommend it.

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text 2019-06-19 20:36
Booklikesopoly Roll 5
The Summer Book - Esther Freud,Thomas Teal,Tove Jansson

I've been reading a few other things for the past few days (and still am), but decided to roll again anyway because I absolutely love it! I rolled 7 which took me to this space:

 

 

I've been meaning to read The Summer Book by Tove Jansson ever since BT gave it a glowing recommendation.

 

This is how my board looks now:

 

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review 2018-12-02 17:11
Il libro dell'estate - Tove Jansson,Carmen Giorgetti Cima
“… una pianta la si sposta dove può stare meglio, per una settimana ce la fa a sopravvivere sulla veranda. Se si sta via più a lungo, la si affida a qualcuno che la bagni, e può essere un po’ complicato.
Perfino le piante diventano una responsabilità, come tutto quello di cui si ha cura e che non è in grado di decidere da sé.”


Una vita germoglia, un’altra appassisce. Nel mezzo tutte le tempeste e i bisogni e le assenze tessuti in un’organza di mestizia, ricamata con vaporosa levità e rarefatta ironia.
Non c’è trama nella pagina quotidiana dell’esistenza, ma va a comporre il romanzo della vita il cui disegno è noto: nascere, vivere, morire. Questo sa la vita sfiorita. Questo va scoprendo la novella vita.

Delicato come un acquerello, con qualche guizzo di china fra i colori, Il libro dell’estate è una favola gentile. Contenuta e garbata, sfiora senza toccare, scalda senza accendere. Poeticamente algida. 
Algidamente poetica.
“Aha”.
E allora voglio tradurre l’insopportabile petulanza di Sofia come richiesta, prepotente e gridata, di quel mancato slancio istintivo e umano capace di attenuare, per quanto possibile, il dolore della perdita e il senso di smarrimento e rabbia. 
Un modo per chiedere qualcosa di più. Alla nonna. E alla penna di Tove. 
Fuoco e sale anziché algida poesia.
“Aha”, direbbe Sofia.
“Aha”, ripeterebbe la nonna.
“Aha”, aggiungo io. Perché? C’è una bambina di sei anni alle prese con l'elaborazione del lutto, e mai un abbraccio.



P.S. Ci sarebbe qualcosa da dire anche sulla traduzione. “Aha”.

 

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