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Reptile Memoirs

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A bestselling Norwegian debut already sold in thirteen territories, Reptile Memoirs is a brilliantly twisty and unusual literary thriller for fans of Gillian Flynn, Jo Nesbø, Kate Atkinson, and Tana French, asking the question: Can you ever really shed your skin?

Liv has a lot of secrets. For her, home is the picturesque town of Ålesund, perched on a fjord in western Norway. One night, in the early-morning embers of a great party in the basement apartment she shares with two friends, Liv is watching TV, high on weed, and sees a python on an Australian nature show. She becomes obsessed with the idea of buying a snake as a pet. Soon Nero, the baby Burmese python, becomes the apartment's fourth roommate. As Liv bonds with Nero, she feels extremely protective, like a caring mother, and she is struck by a desire that surprises her with its intensity. Finally she is safe.

Thirteen years later, in the nearby town of Kristiansund, Mariam Lind goes on a shopping trip with her eleven-year-old daughter, Iben, who angers her mother by asking for a magazine one too many times. Mariam storms off, leaving Iben in the shop and, expecting her young daughter to find her own way home, heads off on a long calming drive. When she returns home in the evening, her husband is relieved to see her but terrified that Iben isn't also there. Detective Roe Olsvik is assigned to the case of Iben's disappearance; he has just turned sixty and is new to the Kristiansund police department. As he interrogates Mariam, he instantly suspects her—but there is much more to this case and these characters than their outer appearances would suggest.

A biting and constantly shifting tale of family secrets, rebirth, and the legacy of trauma, Reptile Memoirs is a brilliant exploration of the cold-bloodedness of humanity, and the struggle to mend broken lives and families.

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    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2021

      New to the Kristiansund police at age 60, Det. Roe Olsvik is investigating the disappearance of 11-year-old Iben, abandoned on a shopping trip by her exasperated mother, Mariam, because of repeated pesky requests to buy a magazine. Naturally, Roe suspects Mariam of malfeasance, and naturally things aren't as they seem. The very suggestion that this story is linked to a young woman's purchase of a baby python 13 years earlier is enough to bring on shivers. A big-deal best seller in Norway, with rights sales to 13 territories, this debut plays to thriller and literary fans alike.

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 8, 2021
      Ulstein’s choppy debut charts the nightmarish connections among two women, an unhinged cop on the verge of retirement, and a tiger python. In 2003, nursing student Liv and her two hard-partying roommates buy the snake and name it Nero, though Liv quickly claims the snake for herself, locking it in her room and growing sexually aroused when feeding it. In 2017, Mariam refuses to buy her 11-year-old daughter, Iben, a comic book, and the girl runs away. Chief Inspector Roe Olsvik, 60, is assigned to the case of Iben’s disappearance. He suspects Mariam of foul play, and his investigation soon crosses several ethical boundaries. The trauma of abuse is central to both Liv’s and Mariam’s stories, with Liv having been assaulted by her older brother growing up, and Iben being the result of a rape that occurred before Mariam was married. Chapters narrated by Nero, who reflects on his snake siblings and at one point does a very bad thing, add an awkwardly fey perspective (“I saw her face. Something was dripping from it—salty drops from her eyes,” he recounts of Liv), and psychological intrigue abounds as the parallel narratives gradually coalesce, revealing Olsvik’s motivations for stalking Mariam. There are some surprises, as not every character turns out to be who they seem, but the twists largely feel contrived and the result of fortuitous discoveries. Still, the depiction of the characters’ pain adds depth to this literary thriller.

    • Booklist

      November 1, 2021
      When 11-year-old Iben Lind disappears from a Kristiansund, Norway, shopping center after a fight with her mother, Chief Inspector Roe Olsvik is certain that the child's mother, Mariam, is responsible. Instead of confirming that Iben had just stormed off toward home, Mariam ignored her husband's frantic calls and took a meandering drive for hours. Also, there is the matter of Mariam's hidden past, tied closely to the tragic death of Roe's own daughter. He's been watching Mariam, knowing that she can only hide her dark impulses for so long, and when she disappears during the investigation, his certainty that she's a killer seems confirmed. Woven into the search for Iben is a story hidden for 15 years: a troubled young woman, Liv, finds connection with Nero, a pet python that makes increasingly darker demands of her. When Liv finally breaks Nero's hold, he exacts a deadly price that leads to Iben's disappearance. Everyone seems guilty in this well-written, pitch-black psychological thriller, whose tense, lost-child theme conjures twisted fairytale tropes.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2022
      In this debut novel from Norway, an 11-year-old girl goes missing more than a decade after connected events involving a troubled young woman who sleeps with her pet python. The little girl, Iben, disappears from a supermarket in 2017 after her mother, Mariam, refuses to buy her a zombie comic book. Mariam, who is married to a politician, responds strangely to the disappearance, which is investigated, along with Mariam's behavior, by an aging cop with a checkered past. Back in 2003, Liv, who was abused by her older brother when they were kids (she was then known as Sara--not her last name change), finds solace--and sexual gratification--in the scaly company of her demanding python, Nero, who must be fed with ever larger living things. Her human friend Anita, a new mother beaten by her husband, turns to Liv for help. Mariam later becomes part of this vicious cycle when she is raped, resulting in the birth of her daughter. Ulstein's provocative treatment of brutal male behavior, including an approving reference to female spiders devouring their male partners, can be powerful. But populated by many unpleasant characters doing unpleasant things, the novel loses focus at critical times. It's not enough that the increasingly large and hungry Nero commits an unmentionable nasty incident that upstages everything. Ulstein also feels compelled to include periodic first-person commentary from the python, who ironically but not inaccurately calls Liz "the cold woman." An original but flawed thriller that never rises to the level of chilly.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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