Mirror, Shoulder, Signal: A Novel

Mirror, Shoulder, Signal: A Novel

by Dorthe Nors, Misha Hoekstra

Narrated by Justine Eyre

Unabridged — 4 hours, 48 minutes

Mirror, Shoulder, Signal: A Novel

Mirror, Shoulder, Signal: A Novel

by Dorthe Nors, Misha Hoekstra

Narrated by Justine Eyre

Unabridged — 4 hours, 48 minutes

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Overview

Sonja is ready to get on with her life. She's over forty now, and the Swedish crime novels she translates are losing their fascination. She sees a masseuse, tries to reconnect with her sister, and is finally learning to drive. But under the overbearing gaze of her driving instructor, Sonja is unable to shift gears for herself. And her vertigo, which she has always carefully hidden, has begun to manifest at the worst possible moments.



Sonja hoped her move to Copenhagen years ago would have left rural Jutland in the rearview mirror. Yet she keeps remembering the dramatic landscapes of her childhood?the endless sky, the whooper swans, the rye fields?and longs to go back. But how can she return to a place that she no longer recognizes? And how can she escape the alienating streets of Copenhagen?



In Mirror, Shoulder, Signal, Dorthe Nors brings her distinctive blend of style, humor, and insight to a poignant journey of one woman in search of herself when there's no one to ask for directions.

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times - Parul Sehgal

…Dorthe Nors, the darkly comic Danish writer…is at her wiliest when she's most direct. Mirror, Shoulder, Signal…is Nors at her most unassuming and ambitious…We're locked in Sonja's consciousness, but the novel never becomes claustrophobic. Opening it feels like opening a window—there's a bracing freshness and chill to the writing, and the unforced ease of a song…However plain the prose, Nors can't help but handle words in interesting ways and put them to original uses…Beneath the cool minimalism roils maximalist outrage—the horror of being captive to not only your body but to society.

Publishers Weekly

04/23/2018
The astute and contemplative latest from Nors (So Much for That Winter) follows 40-something Sonja, a transplant to Copenhagen from rural Jutland, as she belatedly comes to terms with adulthood. It’s been years since she spoke to her simpler, better-adjusted sister, Kate, and she barely makes a living translating popular Swedish crime novels. While her massage therapist Ellen considers her an “emotional tight-ass,” Sonja thinks of herself as a “parasite on the colossal cadaver of Western culture.” Sonja, fighting nostalgia for her childhood in the rye fields, needs a change in her life, but she can’t recapture her youth without finding a way to reach out to the estranged Kate, and she can’t drive home from Copenhagen without a driver’s license. She undertakes driving lessons, but problems arise when they trigger her latent vertigo. Out of this subtle emotional drama, Nors brings to life Sonja’s everyday trials and lacerating self-doubt, with vivid characters like the quietly judgmental Ellen; Sonja’s larger-than-life driving instructor, Jytte; and the distant Kate, to whom Sonja tepidly begins to write postcards. Not a lot happens this thoughtful novel, but not a lot has to. Nors conjures a gently fraught reality in prose that evokes a life paused halfway between nostalgia for the past and hope for the future. (June)

From the Publisher

“Dorthe Nors is one of the most original voices in current Danish writing.”—CBC Radio, “Writers & Company”

“Nors is an exquisitely precise writer, and in rendering her heroine’s small disruptions and, yes, victories, she is writing for, and of, every one of us.”Kirkus Reviews, starred review

“Astute and contemplative. . . . Nors conjures a gently fraught reality in prose that evokes a life paused halfway between nostalgia for the past and hope for the future.”Publishers Weekly

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2018-03-20
In this tautly observed novel, Nors reveals a middle-age woman on the verge of disappearance and discovery.Danish writer Nors is a miniaturist; her book So Much for That Winter (2016) gathers two novellas that read like collections of epigrams, while her story collection Karate Chop (2014) brings together 15 microfictions, each imbued with an uneasy sense of loss. In this, the first of her four novels to be translated into English, she follows up on and enlarges these concerns. The story of Sonja, 40-something, a translator of Swedish crime fiction, the book unfolds in and around Copenhagen, but its true territory is the inner life. Sonja is stuck: bored of translation work, envious (but not really) of her sister who appears to have it all. She is learning to drive—the title is a reference to her instructor's admonition about changing lanes in traffic—and she also suffers from positional vertigo, an inherited condition in which she can fall prey to dizziness simply by the wrong movement of her head. In part, all this is metaphor, a way to frame Sonja's displacement. She is anonymous, much like the women Nors describes in her essay "On the Invisibility of Middle-Aged Women" (2016). At the same time, Nors is after something bigger than mere symbol; she is trying to excavate the pattern of a life. "But it doesn't matter," Sonja says late in the novel. "I manage, of course." The line, in many ways, is key to the novel, which makes vivid drama out of the most mundane events. Not much happens here—some awkward interactions with her driving teachers, a couple of massages, some letters and phone calls with her family—but not much has to, for the drama Nors excavates is the most human one. What does it mean to keep on living? What does it mean to make a place for oneself, no matter how small or conditional? "A person who has her hand on the back of your heart," Sonja reminds us, "shouldn't be unsure."Nors is an exquisitely precise writer, and in rendering her heroine's small disruptions and, yes, victories, she is writing for, and of, every one of us.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171418861
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 07/03/2018
Edition description: Unabridged
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