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Populärmusik aus Vittula. by Mikael Niemi
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Populärmusik aus Vittula. (original 2000; edition 2002)

by Mikael Niemi

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
1,3803314,589 (3.73)23
i really wanted to love this book since I like Scandinavien books, but I could not connect to the characters. The writing style kept me going half why but then I just was not interested anymore. I might look up other books by him, but this story was just not for me. ( )
  kakadoo202 | Jun 26, 2013 |
English (24)  Swedish (3)  German (3)  Spanish (1)  Norwegian (1)  Danish (1)  All languages (33)
Showing 24 of 24
This book contains some really racist language. It’s totally unnecessary. The author was born in 1959, so I don’t think his age is any excuse. The book was published in Swedish in 2000 and the English translation published in 2003, so I’m really surprised it wasn’t taken out.

Apart from that, it was a bit of an insight into growing up in a very cold and remote place. ( )
  KWharton | Dec 14, 2024 |
I first read it back in 2005/2006. Now, 15 years later, it was almost like reading a new book to me in terms that I did not remember much of the stories, but my overall impression, I think, is the same. I really liked it, the storytelling is vivid. There are places when dreams, nightmares, and tales mingle with the reality. Pajala is very authentic with their hard-working and hard-drinking men who are afraid to be knapsu (unmanly) and strong women who not only need to deal with all the household jobs, but also with their men. The Northern nostalgia is very peculiar and I share it to some extent as I also grew up in Northern Europe. The descriptions of cold, snow, ice in winter or midnight sun, calm evenings, mosquitos in summer also make me nostalgic. However, I believe a bit got lost in the English translation (I still own a copy in Swedish, which I might attempt to read later) and not understanding the Tornedalen Finnish. If I were from Northern Sweden, I would probably give it all five stars.

For me, the rock'n'roll music played a supporting role in the novel. It is more a coming-of-age story and an ethnographic tale of the Torne valley. The best stories were about the gruesome summer job, Niila's grandmother's funeral, and actually all the descriptions of social gatherings featuring lots of shnapps and moonshine. ( )
  dacejav | May 16, 2022 |
Mostly good, with some extremely good passages, but unfortunately has a few very weak ones as well. In particular, while the exaggerations of reality are hilarious, the 'magic realism' is rather incongruous. ( )
  Stravaiger64 | May 13, 2021 |
Difficult to say whether I liked the book or not. There are some magnificient chapters with well-described situations and characters that I really enjoyed reading, and yet I found some parts of the book very weird. According to most reviews, this book was supposed to be funny and touching, but I somehow missed that. ( )
  Mrvica | Mar 25, 2016 |
i really wanted to love this book since I like Scandinavien books, but I could not connect to the characters. The writing style kept me going half why but then I just was not interested anymore. I might look up other books by him, but this story was just not for me. ( )
  kakadoo202 | Jun 26, 2013 |
On the link between madness and literature -
Excerpt from a lecture delivered in the sauna by Dad; he explicates the facts of life for 14 year old Mattie so his son will know how to be a man:
"Then [Dad] started going through a list of all the family idiots. I'd already met some of them: one was in the psychiatric hospital in Gallivare, and another in Pitea. In medical jargon it was called schizophrenia, and it seemed to run in the family. It would appear when you reached the age of eighteen or so, and was due to certain causes. Frustrated love was one, and Dad begged me to be very wary of getting involved with complicated women who were scared of sex. Dad urged me never to be too persistent with the fair sex if they declined to open their legs, but rather to follow his own example and find myself an unabashed peasant girl with a big ass.
"The other cause of lunacy was brooding. Dad strongly advised me never to start thinking too much, but to do as little as possible of it, since thinking was a menace that only got worse the more of it you did. He could recommend hard manual labor as an antidote: shoveling snow, chopping firewood, skiing cross-country, and that kind of thing, because thinking usually affected people when they were lolling about on the sofa or sitting back to rest in some other way. Getting up early was also recommended, especially on weekends and when you had a hangover, because all kinds of nasty thought could worm their way into your mind then.
"It was particularly important not to brood about religion. God and death and the meaning of life were all extremely dangerous topics for a young and vulnerable mind, a dense forest in which you could easily get lost and end up with acute attacks of madness. You could confidently leave that kind of stuff until your old age, because by then you would be hardened and tougher, and wouldn't have much else to do. Confirmation classes should be regarded as a purely theoretical exercise: a few texts and rituals to memorize, but certainly not anything to start worrying about.
"The most dangerous thing of all, and something he wanted to warn me about above all else, the one thing that had consigned whole regiments of unfortunate young people to the twilight world of insanity, was reading books. This objectionable practice had increased among the younger generation, and Dad was more pleased than he could say to note that I had not yet displayed any such tendencies. Lunatic asylums were overflowing with folk who'd been reading too much. Once upon a time they'd been just like you and me, physically strong, straightforward, cheerful, and well balanced. Then they'd started reading. Most often by chance. A bout of flu perhaps, with a few days in bed. An attractive book cover that had aroused some curiosity. And suddenly the bad habit had taken hold. The first book had led to another. Then another, and another, all links in a chain that led straight down into the eternal night of mental illness. It was impossible to stop. It was worse than drugs.
"It might just be possible, if you were very careful, to look at the occasional book that could teach you something, such as encyclopedias or repair manuals. The most dangerous kind of book was fiction - that's where all the brooding was sparked and encouraged. Damnit all! Addictive and risky products like that should only be available in state-regulated monopoly stores, rationed and sold only to those with a license, and mature in age."
Kindle location 2712-2741

In the oral tradition of hyperbolic tall-tales -
Chapter 10 tells the most frightening ghost story of all time.
Chapter 12 tells the darkest, most evil story of all time.
Chapter 13 tells the funniest mentor story of all time.
Each chapter is the self-contained narrative of an event during the journey from innocence to experience.
  Mary_Overton | Mar 13, 2013 |
A funny, odd, interesting novel made up of interlocking short stories about growing up in the far north. Often the stories segue into tall tales (e.g. two rough brothers in a laconic family begin to fight and, after being ordered outdoors, they exchange blows and gradually grow fur and fangs and turn into bears). The author makes gentle fun of the perceived backwardness of the residents of this remote part of Sweden while telling the story of two boys growing up and discovering alcohol, sex, and rock and roll. Funny and touching and more than a little weird.
  bfister | Dec 28, 2012 |
Shameless, touching, dirty. Reminded me of De Helaasheid Der Dingen, but this one was first. ( )
  khink | Aug 16, 2011 |
POPULAR MUSIC FROM VITTULA is, quite simply, a terrific book! As a coming of age story, Mikael Niemi's novel often brought to mind another book from Scandinavia titled simply, BEATLES, by Lars Saabye Christensen, which I also loved. Originally published in Swedish, I am quite confident that PMfV lost nothing in its excellent translation into English by Laurie Thompson. The book is full of humor and all the special poignancy that comes with tales of childhood and the tortured rituals of adolescence. There is even a chapter on the air rifle wars amongst the not-really-so-violent-or-evil teenage 'gangs' of Pajala, a town located inside the Arctic circle in the northernmost reaches of Sweden near the Finnish border. The BB gun story also brought to mind, naturally, Jean Shepherd's classic story (into classic film), "A Christmas Story." There are other wonderful, funny stories about relatives, weddings and funerals, and various local "characters." I got a good chuckle in reading about what things are 'manly,' as well as comments on "the most dangerous thing of all," according to the father of Matti (the book's narrator), which "was reading books ... Lunatic asylums were overflowing with folk who'd been reading too much."

Perhaps, however, it was the Beatles connection that made the book stand out for me. Because, like the Christensen book, the storyline also portrays four young boys who are electrified by their discovery of rock music and depicts, often in howlingly funny scenes, how mesmerized they are by their first exposure to the Beatles, in the form of the 45 rpm single, "Rock 'n' Roll Music." Matti, the book's narrator, soon forms a musical alliance with his friends Niila, Erkki and Holgeri that will catapult them into local notoriety and a new popularity with girls - a time they will always remember.

A more personal connection for me between the Niemi and Christensen books is found in the references to Radio Luxembourg, often the only link between remote areas of the world and popular music. As a young man in the US Army, I was stationed on a mountain top in northern Turkey in 1963-64, and one of the greatest pleasures for me and my comrades was to sneak a listen to the top tunes on Radio Luxembourg, when we should have been practicing our spycraft of electronic eavesdropping. In fact, I first heard the Beatles on Radio Luxembourg, not long before their first two Parlophone LPs made it to the local PX. Having grown up on Elvis (also mentioned in the Niemi book - Matti's sister had "Jailhouse Rock"), Ricky Nelson and other American pop, we didn't at first quite know what to make of the Beatles, but quickly decided we liked them. A year later, I was a hanger-on with a GI cover band in Germany, who played many of the Beatles tunes as part of their repertoire. In fact, when The Panics' lead singer was injured for a brief time, I got my own chance to be a "rock-n-roll star" for a few shining moments of my youth. (It's all in my own book, SOLDIER BOY.) So maybe that's why I was so caught up in Matti's story that had many of the same ingredients as mine - small towns, sex, drinking, rock & roll. The fact that the story was set in the most remote region of northern Sweden, inside the ARCTIC CIRCLE, for cripes sake, didn't seem to matter. This was just a great story! There, I'm back where I started. I'm so very glad I read Popular Music in Vittula, and plan to tell other folks about it at every opportunity. ( )
  TimBazzett | Nov 29, 2010 |
A fantastic and funny novel set in Sweden. About a young man and full of fun with his friends, family stories, music and snow and plenty of nostalgia. This is a light-hearted novel that is a good read. ( )
  CarolKub | Jun 20, 2010 |
A wonderful collections of stories about boyhood friendships. Descriptive language that is very impressive. Matti, Niila, Beatles, mouse hunter, arm wrestling, sauna, first black man, teenage drinking contest, starting a band, and so much more. ( )
  libraryclerk | Mar 13, 2010 |
Recommended by a friend who knows I like both Swedish books and young adult/coming of age books. This was unlike any book I'd read before and by the time I finished it, I'd fallen in love. Niemi's writing, or at least the translation was amazing. The book was full of wonder and ... I don't even know how to describe it. I just loved it and found it both hilarious and moving. ( )
  callmecayce | Dec 7, 2009 |
What a very unusual piece of work! We're here in the far north of Sweden, getting a very close acquaintance with Matti, a young teenage boy whose exposure to Western pop culture must come from a Finnish radio station.

This book is partly a series of tall tales, part gothic horror, and all coming-of-age story. I thoroughly enjoyed the unfamiliar setting married to the universal themes of exploration and discovery when coming of age. Additionally, this work has some exotic features which add spice, like Scandinavian folk tales, and the electrifying effect when Elvis Presley's #1 hits reach town. Laurie Thompson's translation (from the Swedish, I think) is seamless, transparent, and wonderful.

I took note, while reading this, of the question of why music should come from female reproductive parts. Because vittula, the name of the town from across the border, is a Finnish word for ... well, let's just say the boy is an adolescent.

I recommend this book very highly. It's a quick, easy-to-read, very different and diverting romp.

http://bassoprofundo1.blogspot.com/2010/06/popular-music-from-vittula-by-mikael.... ( )
  LukeS | Apr 7, 2009 |
Hauskahan se. ( )
  dst | Jan 10, 2009 |
Fabulous. I had so much fun reading this. ( )
  spinningjenny | Jun 16, 2008 |
This is a truly rare thing - a novel that revisits and reinvents the genre, constantly knocking the reader off balance without resorting to the crude techniques lesser authors will employ (ie sex and violence - although the book has plenty of both). Northern rural readers (I am Canadian) will especially enjoy the peerless decriptions of climate, alcohol and hockey, touchstones of the northern experience. Look out for the chapters on church services and weddings, both of which could stand alone as short stories. Delightfully idiosyncratic and deeply universal, all at the same time. ( )
  bramwee | Jun 12, 2008 |
  www.snigel.nu | Nov 18, 2007 |
Bogen er fuld af fantastisk gode historier, der kunne være sande - næsten - og den har en både barsk og varm humor, som jeg slet ikke kan stå for. ( )
  kiviversen | Nov 15, 2007 |
Også filmatiseret - hylende morsom:)) ( )
  Thudafoth | Sep 17, 2007 |
En varm og humoristisk bog om Matti og vennen Niila, der vokser op i det yderste Nordsverige i 1960'erne og 1970'erne og drømmer om at spille rockmusik ( )
  bek.randersbib | Jul 13, 2007 |
About boys discovering rock 'n roll in Northern Sweden in the sixties. Extremely witty. I was laughing out loud all the time. ( )
  poulantik | May 11, 2007 |
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