Books Are Jazzy

A reader lives a thousand lives before they die. The person who never reads lives only one.

The reading challenge book for April was Minna Canth's arguably most famous work, Työmiehen vaimo. The play follows a recently married couple, a hardworking woman and an alcoholic husband, as their marriage slowly falls apart.

I had previously dipped my toe into Canth's texts by reading her play Annaliisa, and I was excited to read her other works. From my previous readings I knew Canth was known for focusing on so-called "women's issues". However, when I started Työmiehen vaimo, I was disappointed by how she presented these feminist themes in this specific text. The only real conflict in the story was the husband's alcoholism and how the wife found it difficult to accept. Instead of creating well-rounded characters, the characters in the play were two opposites of a moral quandary.

I'm glad I've now read Työmiehen vaimo, solely for the cultural capital associated with it, but I would not recommend the play if it was not considered a classic of Finnish literature. 

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐

-Laura
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The start of a new month means another book review of a Finnish "classic". During March my goal was to read Jäniksen vuosi by Arto Paasilinna, and I finished it with plenty of time left in the month. I was especially excited to read this book because Jäniksen vuosi is my mother's all-time-favorite-book. I even timed my reading of the novel so that she was visiting me at the same time as I was reading it, so that we could discuss it as I read along.


The concept of the novel is absolutely amazing. The novel follows a middle-aged journalist who encounters a hare on the road and decides to drop everything in his life to spend time with this hare. He quits his job, leaves his wife, even sells his boat! The novel follows the extraordinary pair for a year, but the ending is left open to suggest that their adventures continue beyond this.

I highly, highly recommend this novel to everyone! Not only is it hilarious, it also offers some valuable life lessons. Moreover, it has been translated into English and can be found under the title The Year of the Hare. Let me know in the comments down below if you've read this novel.

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Happy Readings!
-Laura


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Hello everyone! Another month has gone by, which means it's time for another update to my 2018 Reading Challenge! In February I read the novel Rautatie by Juhani Aho. Rautatie follows a married couple as they first hear about a train coming to a village near them, to them riding on the train for the first time, to finally deciding never to speak of the experience again. Previous to the novel's events, the couple had never heard of a train before and thus when hearing various details about trains and their workings, they quickly attached fantastical elements to the transportation system.


Compared to January's read, Rautatie was a lot more similar to other classic Finnish literature that I have read and therefore reading it felt more comfortable. Having said that, I'm not sure if I would go out of my way to recommend this book, since plot-wise not a lot happens.

Rating:⭐⭐⭐

-Laura
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I just finished reading Kesäkirja by Tove Jansson, as the first book in my 2018 Reading Challenge. Due to some unexpected coursework I didn't technically finish reading the book in January, but since I read the bulk of it during January, I'm still counting this as a win.


Kesäkirja was a short and sweet novel detailing the friendship between a young girl and her grandmother as they experience it over multiple summers at their summer cottage. Reading this in the cold of January did lessen my enjoyment of the novel a bit (since it's a summer novel, it would be best enjoyed read on a beach in the summer). Reflecting on it further, I believe the novel took on a more dreamy quality due to me reading it in the opposite climate the events of the novel occur in. I would like to reread the book during the summer to see how this changes how I react with the story.

Overall, I would recommend Kesäkirja for people who enjoy character driven novels. Personally, I liked reading the more adult side of Jansson's writings.

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐

-Laura
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During 2017, also known as the year Finland turned 100 years as an independent country, the Finnish publishing company WSOY created a series of books that I am extremely excited about. They polled Finnish readers for their favorite Finnish books and re-released the top 12 as a series with brand new covers created by contemporary Finnish artists.


One book was released per month and during the course of 2017 I managed to gather copies of all 12 books into my hands. All this leads me to introduce a new feature for 2018. One of my reading goals for this year will be to read one of these books per month in the order they were released in as part of the series. After reading the book I will of course be reviewing it here. In January, I'm starting with some classic Tove Jansson, specifically her Kesäkirja. Keep your eyes peeled for a review of it later this month!

-Laura
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About Us

Hi! We're Laura and Anna, two twenty-something women who love reading! We originally met each other in Atlanta, GA, over 10 years ago. Since then, we moved back to our home country of Finland, and now that we are in university, Anna lives in Turku, Finland, studying medicine and Laura lives in Asheville, NC, studying literature.

We read in a wide variety of genres, including all forms of young adult fiction and some adult books as well. Laura tries to focus on fantasy, but sometimes her coursebooks get in the way, whereas Anna is happy to read anything other than her textbooks!

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