Book Club 2025: Du er hjemme nå by Per Petterson

I’m usually so slow getting to new books — it feels like I’m always years behind, somehow. Or centuries. But this one is new! So new that there isn’t an English translation yet, I think? Just a couple weeks old…

And it’s really good. It not as immediate as, for instance, Out Stealing Horses, but it’s totes gripping. Sometimes it felt like he’s careening from the personal to the private, and I’m like sitting here “OK, but why are you telling me this?”, but then the next scene would just be devastating.

I think it’s a really strong book, but I see that it’s gotten some middling reviews… which I understand, but I think they’re holding the book wrong. Sorry, I meant reading the book wrong. And I see that the parts of the book I liked the most are what the reviewers found the weakest. Typical! Why must everybody else always be so wrong!

Du er hjemme nå (2025) by Per Petterson (3.83 on Goodreads)

Record Label Samplers: Erased Tapes: 1 + 1 = X

This label sampler works well as a label sampler. At least it did for me — I wasn’t really aware of Erased Tapes as an entity before I got this album. I had bought stuff from a number of the people featured here — David Allred, Peter Broderick, Nils Frahm etc — but I had never made the connection before.

This made me pay attention, and whenever Erased Tapes release something now, I at least give it a go. They’re not as consistent as, say, 4AD in the 80s, but they’ve got a certain aesthetic and quite a lot of it’s good.

And as an album, this is really good — the sequencing is great; it flows well. But perhaps not surprising:

1+1=X sees Erased Tapes artists come together to make an album as a collective. Sharing the same space, instruments and each others’ capabilities during a residency at Vox-Ton studio in Berlin, they recorded 20 songs to mark the label’s 10-year history.

 04:19 Qasim Naqvi - Brutal Moderna
 04:20 A Winged Victory for the Sullen - Long May It Sustain
 05:10 Rival Consoles - Ritual
 03:06 Nils Frahm - Frau Dehlholm
 05:48 Daniel Thorne - Iroise
 05:11 Daniel Brandt - Blackpool Sands Forever
 08:13 Douglas Dare - Darling
 04:18 Michael Price - Eyn Hallow
 03:43 Kiasmos & Högni - Zebra
 04:45 Ben Lukas Boysen - Pending
 04:50 David Allred - Ahoy
 03:31 Anne Müller - Bel Tono
 17:04 Lubomyr Melnyk - Palisade 1
 04:44 Hatis Noit - Inori
 04:06 Masayoshi Fujita - Spaceship Magical
 03:57 Högni - Máni
 05:23 Peter Broderick - The Perpetual Glow
 05:36 Arthur Jeffes & Nils Frahm - Up is Good
 04:27 Daniel Brandt - Blackpool Sands Forever (Rival Consoles Remix)
 06:10 Penguin Cafe - Wheels Within Wheels (Greg Gives Peter Space Remix)

Here’s the full album.

Qasim Naqvi - Brutal Moderna

Long May It Sustain

Rival Consoles - Ritual Song


Daniel Thorne - Iroise

Douglas Dare - Darling (1+1=X)

Michael Price - Eyn Hallow

Kiasmos & Högni - Zebra (1+1=X)

Ben Lukas Boysen - Pending

David Allred - Ahoy (1+1=X)

Anne Müller - Bel Tono (1+1=X)

Hatis Noit - Inori

Masayoshi Fujita - Spaceship Magical


Peter Broderick - The Perpetual Glow (1+1=X)

Erased Tapes - 1+1=X

This blog post is part of the Record Label Samplers series.

Book Club 2025: Simple Justice by John Morgan Wilson

I was going to read something else, but then I decided I wanted to read some junk instead, so here we are.

I was ready to ditch this book after the first three pages — they seem pretty overwrought and overwritten. But then the book evened out and before I knew it I was up to page 100 and I went “hm”.

It’s just an oddly structured book. Or rather, it’s got the structure of a bowl of suet: Our protagonist is a (disgraced, of course) journalist (with a very traumatic background, of course) who’s investigating a murder, so we get a lot of interviews. Totally normal. But the thing is that nothing seems to make much difference — we don’t really learn much of interest to the case in question, and there’s no mounting tension or anything that resembles an arc.

The protagonist gets a literal box of literal evidence pretty early on, but doesn’t bother to actually look at the contents, because… because in that box is the culprit, and it’s (to boot) the only culprit it could possibly be out of the characters we’re presented with. So basically everything the protagonist does — the interviews, the running around — it’s all pointless.

I’ve seldom read a mystery book where the mystery is handled this ineptly. And this won an Edgar award! (For best debut mystery.)

This very much reads like the first book somebody would write — or rather, it reads like the book before the first published one, because it’s just weird that the editors didn’t say “well, you don’t write badly (for the most part), so get back to us with your next novel”.

Then again, in the foreword the author says that he rewrote the book extensively in 2020. Perhaps it was better in the original version? Unless he totally changed the mystery itself, too, it’s hard to see how.

Right.

Simple Justice (1996/2020) by John Morgan Wilson (buy new, buy used, 4.15 on Goodreads)

Record Label Samplers: Lonely is an Eyesore

Including this album in this blog series is almost a cheat. Yes, it is indeed a record label sampler in that all the tracks are from bands that were signed to the label at the time, and it includes all the bands that were signed to the label at that time.

But all the tracks are unique to this compilation (except for one, where we get a (superior) demo version of a tracks already released), so it’s more of a showcase for the label than a regular sampler.

It’s really elaborate — it was done in a variety of formats, and one of them was as a wooden box in an edition of 100.

So… it’s like a fetish object for record collectors.

But! It’s also, indeed, a really, really, really good album in and of itself, and it probably worked well as a promotional tool.

Some of the bands were uncomfortable with the album, since it seemed to focus so much on the label itself and not the artists — in interviews, there were mutterings about how there’s no such thing as a “4AD band”, and they’re all individuals, and etc… While it didn’t seem so at the time, I guess you could see this as the start of the end of what made 4AD 4AD.

 02:57 Colourbox - Hot Doggie
 05:27 This Mortal Coil - Acid, Bitter and Sad
 05:35 The Wolfgang Press - Cut the Tree
 04:29 Throwing Muses - Fish
 02:58 Dead Can Dance - Frontier
 03:17 Cocteau Twins - Crushed
 04:49 Dif Juz - No Motion
 04:03 Clan of Xymox - Muscoviet Musquito 
 08:48 Dead Can Dance - The Protagonist

Here’s the full album, or individual tracks:

Hot Doggie (Remastered)

Acid, Bitter And Sad (Remastered)

The Wolfgang Press - Cut The Tree

Throwing Muses - Fish (Official Video)

Dead Can Dance - Frontier

Cocteau Twins - Crushed (Official Video)

Dif Juz - No Motion (Official Video)

Clan of Xymox- Muscoviet Musquito

This blog post is part of the Record Label Samplers series.