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Laura Lindstedt

Author of Oneiron

6+ Works 216 Members 14 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Matti Järvinen.

Works by Laura Lindstedt

Oneiron (2015) 138 copies, 12 reviews
My Friend Natalia: A Novel (2019) 43 copies, 1 review
Sakset : triptyykki (2007) 27 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Taskunovellit (2013) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Lindstedt, Laura
Birthdate
1976-05-01
Gender
female
Nationality
Finland
Birthplace
Kajaani, Finland
Places of residence
Helsinki, Finland
Education
Helsingin yliopisto (filosofian maisteri)

Members

Reviews

This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Seven women find themselves trapped in a kind of limbo. Really between life and death. The first part of the book describes their unearthly encounter. The second, recaps part of their life history, whether rape, gaining a new heart, experiencing a different form of Jewishness, starvation, being frozen in the snow, etc. the third part relates their descent into the abyss -- is it nothingness? the narrator changes through the story and not really parallel. Not an easy book to read, but reflects the unease on death much of the Western world feel.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
vpfluke | 11 other reviews | Oct 25, 2018 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Oneiron has an interesting premise, and I was eager to launch into this book. The rambling prose, however, bogged me down, and I've been stuck halfway through. I figured I'd finally turn in a review. I'm going to give it another try, based on others' enjoyment of the book, and I'll update this when I make it to the end!
 
Flagged
seidchen | 11 other reviews | Jul 24, 2018 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Some books leave me speechless at the end. I mean this quite literally. I’m not making a metaphorical “there are no words” comment about the quality of what I have just read. I am instead trying to report a physical phenomenon, a feeling in my throat and lungs that comes only rarely, just after a last sentence is read, and a book is closed, when I’m left with a dazzling void of complicated feeling that renders me mute. After a while the words come back, and my feelings about the book begin to shape themselves into language.

So here is this novel, Oneiron*. In it seven dead women find themselves together in a placeless place, a white void with only the clothes on their backs. At some point they notice they aren’t breathing. Not long after, they realize they are dead. They share their stories. They help one another. They bear witness to the one another’s final moments.These seven women are remarkable only in the way that every human being is remarkable. The stories of their final moments before death are haphazard and sometimes violent and always meaningless. They have nothing in common, not even a common language. But even so these women make themselves into a caring community, in this strange afterlife, where nothing is ever explained, either to these seven characters, or to the reader. As in real life, the characters, and through them the reader, need to take it on faith that their experiences have purpose.

Oneiron is one of those books that stunned me into silence at the end, and when words did come back, they were from I. Corinthians:

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

Oneiron is not a religious book. God has no place in the afterlife Lindstedt creates. I’m not a religious person. Yet somehow this novel embraces a life philosophy that reminded me of Paul’s teaching. The novel suggests that caring for others–even in the flawed ways these strangers reach out and care for one another after death–is the most vital motivating impulse that gives meaning to our lives.

For a novel in which everyone is dead, this is a remarkably life-affirming novel.

*from Greek ὄνειρον, oneiron, “dream”
… (more)
 
Flagged
poingu | 11 other reviews | Jun 4, 2018 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
How to describe this book? Odd? Maybe. It is the imaginative story of seven unique women who are caught in a space somewhere between death and the final destination, wherever that may be. It is obvious all seven women have passed away but they themselves are not fully cognizant of that fact. They aren't even sure they know where they are except to say they are in a white room devoid of detail. Each woman has a thoroughly detailed personality and an elaborate past to match. More time is spent telling the reader where they have been instead of moving them forward to where they are going. It gets heavy at times. Certain scenes are graphic.

Disclaimer: I normally only chose two different types of books from LibraryThing for the Early Review Program: nonfiction and debut novels. For some reason, the premise of Oneiron (pronounced o.ne:.ron from the Greek, meaning dream) fascinated me: seven women meet in an undefined space only seconds after their deaths. They are in the space between life and afterlife. The don't understand this in-between world.
… (more)
 
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SeriousGrace | 11 other reviews | Apr 12, 2018 |

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
2
Members
216
Popularity
#103,224
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
14
ISBNs
29
Languages
10

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