Reviews

Everything I Don't Remember by Jonas Hassen Khemiri

repobi's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Novel ini adalah sebuah dokumenter tentang kematian seorang lelaki bernama Samuel. Formatnya unik. Lebih mirip verbatim sebuah wawancara. Pergantian sudut pandangnya cepat sekali, tiap paragraf. Permulaan ceritanya pun membingungkan karena muncul tanpa konteks. Butuh waktu agak lama sampai terbiasa dengan mereka.

Kesenangan dalam novel ini muncul setelah terbiasa dengan formatnya. Saya jadi tahu Samuel menurut Ibunya, teman dekatnya, dan mantan pacarnya. Mereka mengenal dan menceritakan Samuel dengan caranya masing-masing. Siapa Samuel itu, kekurangan dan kelebihannya, kesan padanya, sampai pandangan mengenai kematiannya.






supernova7's review

Go to review page

dark reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

This book is uniquely structured, more like a play than a novel. This is also a book that was originally written in Swedish, so I wonder how much got lost in translation. This also means there are some cultural differences. Personally, I didn’t care for the characters, who are written to be self-absorbed and selfish. Not my favorite book, but I think I am better having read it.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

megzxo's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I'd probably give it closer to 3.5 stars. Interesting premise, beautiful and elegant writing. Not sure how I felt about the ending but that happens to me a lot, lol. I'm not sure this format translated very well to audiobook, as it would go back and forth between different characters narrating with no distinction besides subtle changes in the reader's voice. However, he did have a nice voice! :)

therapybard2021's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional funny hopeful sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75

kiraabo02's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

thereadingflightattendant's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

It took me a long time to adjust to the writing style chosen by the author, but once I did it an enjoyable book even though it was confusing at times

judithdcollins's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

A special thank you to Atria and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

EVERYTHING I DON’T REMEMBER by Jonas Hassen Khemiri pushes all boundaries of literary fiction, similar to the hit podcast Serial a multi-ethnic cast of characters, the central plot point of a friend’s passing, and a journalist protagonist weaving together the different threads of a mystery.

Immersive and mysterious, if you loved Mary Kubica’s The Good Girl, Celeste Ng’s Everything, I Never Told You, Allens Eskens' The Life We Bury, and Kristopher Jansma's Why We Came to the City, you will enjoy this richly drawn, powerful and memorable read, from one of Sweden’s literary superstars.

Divided into Three Parts, enjoy the unreliable narrators. An enigma. A puzzle.

Everything I Don’t Remember has been awarded the August prize in the category “Best Swedish Fiction Book of the Year”! The jury’s motivation for the nomination was as follows:

“How did Samuel die, and why? Jonas Hassen Khemiri’s portrayal of the deceitfulness of memory and testimony is as enthralling as a thriller. But the novel is also a love story and a tale of violence, unforgivable betrayals, and the power of economics. An unconventional narrative structure where several different voices paint the portrait of the protagonist. All written in a sophisticated, toned down prose, where the shadowy existence of undocumented immigrants and criminals collide with the sunny world of privilege in a ruthless and hectic Stockholm.”

Who is the unnamed writer? Piecing together the events leading up to the unexpected death of a young man named Samuel. From those who knew him best?

Killed in a car crash before the novel starts readers are unsure if it was a car accident or a planned suicide. This man had many faces. Samuel was different. Puzzling. Contradictory.

The neighbors. Friends. Relatives. Strangers. Flatmate/Best Friend, Ex-Girlfriend. Reconstructing Samuel’s last day. Appears someone is writing a book. A mom’s emails. A son. A Grandmother. Samuel listened without listening.

Confusing in the beginning, who is driving the story, and who is telling the story?

Alternating between flashbacks and flash-forwards, by Samuel, Vandad, and Laide. Samuel and Laide met through their work, with the Migration Board, dealing with residency permits, and she is an interpreter of Arabic and other languages.

Laide is also an activist who participates in demonstrations against anti-immigration policies and who establishes, in a house vacated by Samuel’s grandmother, a shelter for women, many of them abused, who have fled the Middle East. Samuel’s grandmother, who suffers from dementia, has moved into a nursing home.

Vandad, who, it appears, may be gay and attracted to Samuel, is a large man who works as an enforcer for a loan shark. He tries more legitimate employment as a mover without much success. When Laide breaks it the relationship, Vandad, attempts to persuade her to reconsider.

The grandmother’s house is soon overrun with refugees, a fire starts, and Samuel’s despair mounts as his family questions why he allowed this to happen, and he himself wonders why he trusted Laide.

From immigration -related issues, elder care, abuse, unemployment, dead-end jobs, drugs, and racial prejudice. Love and memories. What do people say? What is really true? Who is to blame? One person’s fault, or more?

He was born, he lived, he died. Puzzling, Mysterious, Intriguing. An author asking questions.

Is everyone lying? Decide for yourself. Betrayal. Extortion. Love. Guilt. Memories of the last day. A partial picture —lies, distortion, and deceit. Subjective Truth vs Objective Truth.

Khemiri presents Samuel's story in an unconventional unique format. Pieces of interviews are layered sprinkled with short sentences and a few paragraphs at a time. The narration shifts constantly from person to person. Stories overlap, and the truth feels elusive. Impressions, like the narrators, are unreliable.

Moving, emotional and witty. Focused on death yet mixed with humor and mystery. As a reader, you feel as though there is a literary ghost spying on everyone. Can words be trusted? The accident is in slow motion. Thoughts, feelings. In the end, their memories, both genuine and false, are all of him that remain.

En·ig·mat·ic! Gripping, beautiful and heartbreaking.

Readers will think in some ways: Sarah Koenig’s Serial, Making a Murderer, In Cold Blood- Truman Capote, Fatal Vision-Joe McGinniss, The Journalist And The Murderer-Janet Malcolm, Columbine-Dave Cullen, The Stranger Beside Me-Ann Rule, The Good Nurse-Charles Graebere, and God’ll Cut You Down-John Safran.

These books reveal the power of true-crime writing, pushing the boundaries of the journalist-subject relationship, examining the ethical conundrums inherent in the genre, crafting precise and insightful character studies, and even sometimes allowing for the ultimate reader let-down: an ambiguous conclusion. (which is quite popular today).

Readers will be debating, speculating, and comparing theories. Like Serial, how much of our interest is in the truth and how much in a satisfying narrative? Interpretation. Crime always risks exploitation — of the victims, the accused, and families torn apart by the crime — Sometimes there is potential for discovery and redemption.

"In 2013, Khemiri’s open letter to the Swedish Minister of Justice in response to a controversial police project rapidly became one of the most shared articles on social media in Swedish history."

JDCMustReadBooks

emmath's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Tog mig typ 5 timmar att plöja denna. Sånt händer typ aldrig.

josefinaugustsson's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.0

lillihayes's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Jag tyckte jättemycket om den här boken. Det är alltid så intressant att ser hur olika karaktärer minnas nånting. Den var också ett bra exempel om hur man kan har sån stor missförstånd i relationer. Älskade att läsa en svensk historia som handlar inte om vita svennar och visade hur det är med vardags rasism i Sverige. Först blev jag lite förvirrad med vem det var som pratade men det blev klart ganska snabbt och då tyckte jag väldigt mycket om bokens rösterna. Fantastiskt bok! Rekommendera stark.