Boyhood Island: My Struggle Book 3

Karl Ove Knausgaard

Boyhood Island: My Struggle Book 3
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Vintage Publishing
Country
United Kingdom
Published
1 September 2014
Pages
496
ISBN
9780099581499

Boyhood Island: My Struggle Book 3

Karl Ove Knausgaard

Childhood is exhilarating and terrifying. For the young Karl Ove, new houses, classes and friends are met with manic excitement and creeping dread. Adults occupy godlike positions of power, benevolent in the case of his doting mother, tyrannical in the case of his cruel father.

In the now infamously direct style of the My Struggle cycle, Knausgaard describes a time in which victories and defeats are felt keenly and every attempt at self-definition is frustrated. This is a book about family, memory and how we never become quite what we set out to be.

Review

At last it’s here – the third volume in Karl Ove Knausgaard’s My Struggle series, perhaps the most significant literary project in contemporary letters since the late W. G. Sebald’s extraordinary oeuvre.

At first glance, it’s the conventionality of Boyhood Island that is striking. Yes, it’s a fictionalised autobiography, or an autobiographical fiction if you like, but here the digressions and essayism that marked previous volumes largely give way to a more straightforward, chronological narration; namely, an account of growing up on the little Norwegian island of Tromoya until the age of 13, when the family moved and Knausgaard had to leave all his friends and memories attached to that home-place behind.

But with what a vengeance they return as a 40-year-old author. Much of the book is the reproduction of Knausgaard’s raw experience in all his extraordinary recall: page after page of adventures in the natural environment, childhood hijinks and mischief-making, schoolyard loves and feuds, everyday home life and holidays. But the dark heart of the book lies in Knausgaard’s hatred of his father – the abuse, regularly meted out by him for the pettiest of alleged misdemeanours, I found thoroughly unsettling. That an old name for Tromoya translates as ‘Trauma’ from the Norwegian is chillingly ironic. Though, for all that, there is much that is highly comic here: the boys’ obsession with bodily functions, and later, their accessing of soft-porn; the infatuations with local girls (this book could easily have been entitled A Boy in Love, after its predecessor); and the inevitable heartbreaks. Knausgaard, on the cusp of young adulthood, is awkward, sensitive, dreamy – like many a teenager. In later life though, as a dad himself, he has ‘only one aim: that they (the children) shouldn’t be afraid of their father’.


Martin Shaw

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