Armand V

Dag Solstad author Steven T Murray translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Vintage Publishing

Published:31st May '18

£11.99

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Armand V cover

A novel told exclusively in footnotes, this is Dag Solstad as his masterly best, sketching the turbulent life of a Norwegian diplomat and redefining what a novel can be.

Do exactly what you want, that’s my idea…the drama exists in his voice’ Lydia Davis

Armand is a diplomat rising through the ranks of the Norwegian foreign office, but he’s caught between his public duty to support foreign wars in the Middle East and his private disdain of Western intervention.

‘Solstad doesn’t write to please other people. Do exactly what you want, that’s my idea…the drama exists in his voice’ Lydia Davis

Armand is a diplomat rising through the ranks of the Norwegian foreign office, but he’s caught between his public duty to support foreign wars in the Middle East and his private disdain of Western intervention. He hides behind his knowing ironic statements about the war, which no one grasps and which change nothing in the real world. Armand’s son joins the Norwegian SAS to fight in the Middle East, despite being specifically warned against such a move by his father, which leads to catastrophic, heartbreaking consequences.

Told exclusively in footnotes to an unwritten novel, this is Solstad's radically unconventional novel about how we experience the passing of time: how it fragments, drifts, quickens, and how single moments can define a life.

Winner of the Brage Prize

An experimental novel by a Norwegian veteran, who is loved by Karl Ove Knausgaard, Haruki Murakami and Peter Handke… Very unusual – and in the end, very deep. * Evening Standard *
Solstad is expert in delineating the absurdities of existence… Solstad exposes us to ourselves. [T]he reader is deeply rewarded in the end. -- David Mills * Sunday Times *
Solstad's novels are full of dryly comic, densely existential despair . . . Death occupies the space between each of the footnotes that make up the corpus of Armand V, but what Solstad ultimately celebrates in it is the freedom of the novelist, and of the novel form. -- Nathan Kapp * Times Literary Supplement *
Solstad describes Armand V as a series of “ongoing but distorted footnotes to an unwritten novel”. That sounds experimental but it soon feels as comfortable as a pair of old suede shoes. After about 30 pages Solstad mentions how, in the composition of a novel, he becomes conscious of the point, sometimes 30 or 40 pages back, when “the whole thing went off the rails”. He then starts over from that point, implicitly to get it back on the rails. It’s an extraordinary claim. I mean, the idea that, for Solstad, a novel needs rails. In his weirdly hypnotic way isn’t this what he is always railing against? -- Geoff Dyer * Observer *
All of the whispers have been right: Solstad is a vital novelist. -- Charles Finch * New York Times *
He’s a kind of surrealistic writer... I think that’s serious literature. -- Haruki Murakami
His language sparkles with its new old-fashioned elegance. -- Karl Ove Knausgaard
He doesn’t write to please other people... Do exactly what you want, that’s my idea… the drama exists in his voice, in his comments and views, and that works, it helps connect the reader to the story. -- Lydia Davis
In Norway, Solstad is as celebrated as, say, Don DeLillo or Toni Morrison [in the US]... An utterly hypnotic and utterly humane writer. -- James Wood * New Yorker *
Without question Norway's bravest, most intelligent novelist. -- Per Petterson

ISBN: 9781784708467

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 16mm

Weight: 196g

256 pages