Cover Image: The Summer House

The Summer House

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Member Reviews

Julia and Erik and their two children, Alice and Anton, go to Julia's parents' summer house in northern Finland. Julia wants to use the time to write another book and Erik just wants to relax. However, soon after arriving
Erik learns that he has been retrenched. Julia hasn't been back to the summer house since she was a child so she is fascinated to run into her old childhood friend whose summer house is adjacent. Marike is with Chris and they are trying to set up a movement around climate change.

This is a small, quiet book that encompasses a number of believable daily dramas that occur in most relationships but tackled without resorting to melodramatic tendencies. However it is also a translation and I did wonder if the translation did the original justice. It was a pleasant read but if it was trying to make a particular point, I missed it.

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A nice little break at a summer house sounds nice doesn’t it? Depends on who you go with I suppose, but the family in this novel are the kind you’d want to escape. It’s dysfunctional but the relationships between the various members is what makes it so fascinating. The house acts like a magnifying glass putting emphasis on each and every one. They all come with their problems and, boy, do they have problems. Secrets and lies have also packed their cases. There’s enough baggage already in the summer house!

The setting is a cool calm place which contrasts beautifully with the trauma and chaos within. The various viewpoints add to the variety and randomness of it all.

Oh and didn’t I say before the outside world seems calm by comparison to the randomness within? The book becomes a study of how all people, in the house and those in the world at large, try and fail to live together, speak with each other and adapt to the changes around them.

The house is rotting too – falling to bits. The imagery is loud and clear.

It’s an interesting look at the world and the people within.

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An unremarkable story that didn’t really engage me beyond the unfamiliar and fascinating landscape and seasons of rural Finland. I did enjoy this aspect of the novel very much, the characters and their interaction less so. Of the group of people gathered in the area for the summer, I found Julia and Marike’s relationship the most interesting - women who hadn’t seen each other since shared childhood holidays 20 years ago, but who hadn’t ceased to have an effect on each other. So much so that Julia used Marike as the model for a character in her first novel, drawing on their friendship and rivalry to such an extent that she is embarrassed now to find themselves neighbours for the holiday. As the story progresses, we see how the two women remember things very differently. In fact they have very different views of their current lives, too, with plenty of secrets under the surface to be discovered over the course of the summer.

The writing was a joy when it came to descriptions of the landscape. My biggest disappointment was with the often clunky dialogue - far too much ‘he said, she said’, though reading in translation might not have helped. Imploding marriages, a little bit of coming-of-age for the children, a tentative romance, a wealth of climate change apocalypse speculation and there you have it - a satisfying read, if not particularly memorable.

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After Scandi Noir, is the next big thing Scandi Angst? Philip Teir’s first novel, ‘The Winter War’, drew much praise and comparisons to the likes of Jonathan Franzen and Julian Barnes. Now with this, his second novel, Teir continues his exploration of family, relationships and wider society.

Julia and Erik, with their two children in tow, head out of Helsinki for a long summer staying in Julia’s parents’ long-disused summer house. Unbeknownst to his family, Erik has just been made redundant from his job in IT with a large department store, and as the novel develops the summer house and its locations becomes an arena for Teir to explore ‘where we are now’ in a series of events and visits that become almost set-piece explorations of human relationships and wider social concerns. There is Erik’s brother, home from travelling in Vietnam, aimless and going nowhere with his life; there is the mysterious neighbour Kati, recently widowed and dealing with grief; and there is the ‘neo-hippie’ commune next door, where Julia meets her childhood-friend and discovers a family secret relating to her own parents.

Teir is very good at the detail, the minutiae of relationships and family life. Julia’s and Erik’s marriage is creaking, and by the end of the novel we are unsure where they stand. Although we see the events through many different perspectives it is perhaps through the experiences of the two children that we judge the others: Anton, the younger son, who wants to play video games and enjoy the summer but seems forced to face an adult world that confuses and bewilders; and Alice, just turning thirteen and experiencing boys and love for the first time. Ultimately, however, there is no ‘social norm’, each of the various relationships are failing or have failed (there are open relationships, past affairs, summer flings, and, of course, the ‘nuclear family unit’). The unspoken question is clear: how do we live together in a 21st century world as we slide ever closer to environmental, economic and social devastation?

Whilst I did enjoy the book – I firmly believe Teir is an author to watch for the future – some of the symbolism tended on the heavy-handed: as the family leave at the end of the book there is a ‘hint of autumn in the air’; as Julia learns of her mother’s affair and her husband losing his job it is in the middle of a thunderstorm with full-on lightning at appropriate moments; the summer house itself is rotting away with water seeping in through the basement….. It works, yes, but I feel there could be more nuance. However, I’m quibbling, because I did enjoy this book very much. More than his first novel? I’m not sure, but together the two of them announce a bold new voice in international fiction. And as for a Scandi Angst? Well, we’ll see…

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Having been on a long trip to Finland recently I was interested to read this book. I found many of the factual parts, such as families having a long summer break, to be true of Finnish life and that aspect of the narrative I enjoyed. However there were annoying inconsistencies such as saying that the holiday would be 10 long weeks, when they went away in mid June and were returning for school by the first week of August....not 10 weeks is it? However my main reason for such a low rating is that the book really didn't go anywhere and was frankly depressing. The characters all had issues but nothing was ever resolved or even changed in any significant way. I had expected some sort of resolution or even break up or event at the end of the book bu it literally finished with.....'they all went home.' Sorry I read it all but would not recommend this novel.

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