
The Ambassador (2006)
Sturla Jón Jónsson, the fifty-something building superintendent and sometimes poet, has been invited to a poetry festival in Vilnius, Lithuania, appointed, as he sees it, as the official representative of the people of Iceland to the field of poetry. His latest poetry collection, published on the eve of his trip to Vilnius, is about to cause some controversy in his home country—Sturla is publicly accused of having stolen the poems from his long-dead cousin, Jónas.
Then there’s Sturla’s new overcoat, the first expensive item of clothing he has ever purchased, which causes him no end of trouble. And the article he wrote for a literary journal, which points out the stupidity of literary festivals and declares the end of his career as a poet. Sturla has a lot to deal with, and that’s not counting his estranged wife and their five children, nor the increasingly bizarre experiences and characters he’s forced to confront at the festival in Vilnius ...
A quirky novel that’s filled with insightful and wry observations about aging, family, love, and the mysteries of the hazelnut – a story about the criminal in all of us, the things we steal to be ourselves and the investigations we have to carry out to find out why we committed a crime.
• Nominated for the Nordic Council Literature Prize • The Icelandic Booksellers’ Prize 2006 • Nominated for the Icelandic Literary Prize 2006
Reviews
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
THORGERDUR E. SIGURDARDOTTIR, BOKMENNTIR.IS
GUDRUN LARA PETURSDOTTIR, KISTAN.IS