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A Line in the World

A Year on the North Sea Coast

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Dorthe Nors's first nonfiction book chronicles a year she spent traveling along the North Sea coast—from Skagen at the northern tip of Denmark to the Frisian Islands in the Wadden Sea. In fourteen expansive essays, Nors traces the history, geography, and culture of the places she visits while reflecting on her childhood and her family and ancestors' ties to the region as well as her decision to move there from Copenhagen. She writes about the ritual burning of witch effigies on Midsummer's Eve; the environmental activist who opposed a chemical factory in the 1950s; the quiet fishing villages that surfers transformed into an area known as Cold Hawaii starting in the 1970s. She connects wind turbines to Viking ships, thirteenth-century church frescoes to her mother's unrealized dreams. She describes strong waves, sand drifts, storm surges, shipwrecks, and other instances of nature asserting its power over human attempts to ignore or control it.
Through a deep, personal engagement with this singular landscape, A Line in the World accesses the universal. Its ultimate subjects are civilization, belonging, and change: changes within one person's life, changes occurring in various communities today, and change as the only constant of life on Earth.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 15, 2022
      Danish novelist Nors (Mirror, Shoulder, Signal) makes her first foray into nonfiction with this poetic chronicle of her time spent along Denmark’s North Sea coast. The rugged and ever-shifting coastline, which Nors paints as harsh and unforgiving but not without beauty, has “been a part of me from the beginning,” she writes in “The Line”—it’s where her family is from, and where she owns a house. “Amsterdam, Hvide Sande” shows how “living with the water and off the water takes arrogance and submission at the same time.” “West by Water” reflects on the WWII land mines that, until “well into” Nors’s lifetime, were buried off the coast, while “The Secret Place” describes the industrial waste that contaminated the area around her family’s summer home. One of the most memorable entries is “The Timeless,” which sees Nors and her friend Signe Parkins (whose illustrations adorn the opening of each chapter) explore frescoes in coastal churches; when asked at one church if they’re there to see the paintings, Nors answers, “We’re on a kind of quest for things that transcend time.” Nors’s portrait of her connection to a landscape both “harsh and mild” enchants. Illus.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Ann Richardson sounds natural and relaxed as she delivers myriad Danish place names and words as Dorthe Nors ventures up and down the coast of Denmark. But this isn't a warm travel memoir. It's windy and cold and tinged with menace and risk. Nors visits church frescoes, isolated lighthouses, bonfires with burning witches' effigies, shipwrecks, and chemical plants--there is no hint of hygge here. Richardson excels at conveying the wildness of North Sea storm surges pounding the coast and washing away landmarks, burial grounds, and even whole towns. At times, it's a somewhat difficult listen. Nors jumps around in time and space, and Richardson doesn't give clear signals that we're moving on, so it's easy to get lost for a bit. A.B. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

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