Töfrahöllin
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Töfrahöllin'' ('hall of enchantments') is the fifth novel by Böðvar Guðmundsson, published in 2012 by Uppheimar.


Summary

The protagonist of ''Töfrahöllin'' is Jósep Malmholm, born in the 1960s into a wealthy and highly educated family. Jósep's father is a member of Iceland's urbane upper classes and his mother a bright, upwardly mobile, but ultimately frustrated woman of working class fishing stock from the
Vestmannaeyjar Vestmannaeyjar (, sometimes anglicized as Westman Islands) is a municipality and archipelago off the south coast of Iceland. The largest island, Heimaey, has a population of 4,414, most of whom live in the archipelago's main town, Vestmannaeyja ...
. The summers which the young Jósep spends in the countryside at the farm of Litla-Háfi with older male working-class relatives on his mother's side provides a reference point of happiness and wellbeing through his often dystopian later life. These relatives are his maternal grandfather, a committed communist, and another male relative of roughly Jósep's mother's generation, the farmer Símon, who is milder than Jósep's grandfather and a yet more reliable touchstone for prudent, traditional, rustic Icelandic values. Jósep meets the nouveau-riche investor Kormákur Cooltran, partly because Kormákur establishes a magnificent fishing lodge on the same salmon-river as the one where Litla-Háfi lies. Kormákur Cooltran enjoys a winning charm which is, however, underlain by a steely resolve to get his own way, if necessary by
psychological manipulation In psychology, manipulation is defined as an action designed to influence or control another person, usually in an underhanded or subtle manner which facilitates one's personal aims. Methods someone may use to manipulate another person may includ ...
—framed in Kormákur's case by a selfishly patriarchal worldview and a large helping of homophobia. Kormákur becomes a father-figure to Jósep, whose own (gay) father has abandoned him. He employs Jósep at the fishing-lodge, which Jósep dubs ''Töfrahöllin'' (‘hall of enchantments’). Kormákur tries, to some extent successfully, to control both Jósep and his daughters by pairing them up: through a slightly convoluted series of events, Jósep finds himself in long-term relationships serially with Kormákur's three daughters (Valhrund Besta, Írena, and Álfheiður) Kormákur uses Jósep for around thirty years as a minion in his various power-games and business activities, legal and illegal. Kormákur uses Jósep as his mule in cocaine smuggling, and when caught Jósep chooses to the take the full blame for the smuggling and serves a long prison sentence. Kormákur's influence over Jósep does not wane significantly until eventually, bankrupt and estranged from his children, Kormákur commits suicide. At this point, Jósep is claimed by a forthright Turkish sex-worker, Fatma Özymal, who has been working at the fishing lodge and whom Jósep helps when she is assaulted by Kormákur Cooltran. The novel ends with Fatma popping back to Turkey to collect her daughter in order to bring her to Iceland, retire from sex-work, and, we are promised, to join Jósep in belated petit-bourgeois comfort.


Assessments

The author claimed that the novel, which covers a thirty-five-year span, was thirty years in the making, and attempted to track the changing national character and self-image of Iceland. The reviewer Egill Ólafsson viewed the book as gripping, with colourful characters.


Influences

Through its chapter titles and the fact that Kormákur's wife is a member of a sorority called the Liljurósriddarareglan ('the order of Liljurós'), named after the protagonist of Iceland's most famous traditional ballad, ' Kvæði af Ólafi liljurós', the novel construes Jósep as a parallel for Ólafur liljurós. Meanwhile, Kormákur himself is modelled on the 'sinister, manipulative' elvish king in
Goethe Johann Wolfgang (von) Goethe (28 August 1749 – 22 March 1832) was a German polymath who is widely regarded as the most influential writer in the German language. His work has had a wide-ranging influence on Western literature, literary, Polit ...
's poem '
Der Erlkönig Der or DER may refer to: Places * Darkənd, Azerbaijan * Dearborn (Amtrak station) (station code), in Michigan, US * Der (Sumer), an ancient city located in modern-day Iraq * d'Entrecasteaux Ridge, an oceanic ridge in the south-west Pacific Ocean ...
', which was inspired by the same ballad-tradition. The novel can be seen as a critical commentary on Icelandic culture during the banking boom that preceded the 2008 Icelandic financial crisis.
Alaric Hall Alaric Hall (born 1979) is a British philologist who is an associate professor of English and former director of the Institute for Medieval Studies at the University of Leeds. He has, since 2009, been the editor of the academic journal '' Leeds ...
, �
''Fornaldarsögur'' and Financial Crisis: Bjarni Bjarnason’s ''Mannorð''
��, in ''The Legendary Legacy: Transmission and Reception of the ‘Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda’'', ed. by Matthew Driscoll, Silvia Hufnagel, Philip Lavender and Beeke Stegmann, The Viking Collection, 24 (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2018), pp. 351-75 (pp. 355, 358).


Reviews


Fyrst og fremst saga um persónur
, ''Visir'' (28 November 2012). *Egill Helgason,
Limrur, Lýður læknir, Síðasta freisting Krists og stór skammtur af gagnrýni
, ''Eyjan'' (19 December 2012). * Egill Ólafsson,
Það eru töfrar í Töfrahöllinni
, ''Morgunblaðið'' (24 November 2012), 69.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Tofrahollin 2012 novels Icelandic novels Novels set in Iceland Icelandic-language novels