Johan Harstad talks about attitude, sincerity, the USA and Norway, friendship and love.
Organisers
Participants
Welcome to a reading and a conversation with the Norwegian author Johan Harstad about his book Max, Mischa and the Tet Offensive.
Johan Harstad
(1979) offers a wholly original voice and is one of the most obvious talents published by Gyldendal for many years.
He sees human fates in modern reality in a way that is both urgent and refined, offering a complete involvement and a particular sense of absurd humor. His characters often stand slightly to one side, at a distance to the major pulse of society. They are vulnerable, lonely, different.
Max, Mischa and the Tet Offensive
Friendship, exile, love, war and art: Johan Harstad's breathtaking new epic has it all.
Max Hansen is sleepless in the Midwest. He is a theatre director on tour across the US. It's possible that he has turned into an American. He hasn't been home for over 20 years.
If it was up to him he would never have left the place he was born, a suburb to Stavanger on the west coast of Norway, where kids could make as much noise as they wanted while their fathers were working on the oil rigs in the North Sea, and where a heavy silence descended on the houses when they returned. But no one gets what they want.
Max, Mischa and the Tet Offensive is a novel about the applicability of Vietnamese guerilla warfare in everyday life, about those who have been to war and those who have demonstrated against them: about hyperrealist paintings of washing machines and girls who look like Shelley Duvall; about the sun out on Fire Island and a sought-after working copy of Apocalypse Now. But more than anything this is a novel about the question anyone who has ever left home sooner or later has to ask himself: How long do you have to be away before it becomes too late to go home?
Information about the event
Moderation: Thomas Böhm
Date: 22.03.2019
Time: 07.30 pm
Place: Buchhandlung Seitenblick, Goetzstraße 2, 04117 Leipzig