Review: My Struggle, Book Two

A Man in Love, the second book in Norwegian author Karl Ove Knausgaard's six-volume autobiographical novel My Struggle, stands on its own as a painfully honest examination of the emotional fluctuations in a marriage filled with the normal, everyday squabbles and joys of a couple with three kids. Knausgaard delights in all the little disappointments and frustrations of reality. His specialty is chronicling the ordinary moments we don't think of as important in words so exact the images seem photo-real.

Most of the novel is in flashback, beginning in 2008, as Knausgaard completes its predecessor, then leaping back two years to trace his new life with his second wife, Linda--culminating as he's jotting down the initial ideas for My Struggle: Book One. Determined to be a good person, Karl Ove is a shy, odd, occasionally cranky, big-hearted, genuinely likable narrator who is convinced he doesn't belong anywhere, and longs only to write. He is in his mid-30s when he meets Linda at a five-day writing course; when she prefers his friend, he slashes his own face with broken glass in grief. She soon changes her mind, and he finds himself transplanted by love to Sweden, where Norwegians are considered just this side of wild men.

His sometimes stormy relationship with Linda provides most of the narrative impetus, but linear storytelling is not how Knausgaard propels you through this magnum opus. Instead, he's a proponent of the "types of literature that do not deal with narrative, that are not about anything, but just consist of a voice, the voice of your own personality." If that intelligent, probing, thoughtful voice is what you're after, My Struggle is ordinary life examined through a microscope, right down to the simple miseries of a family vacation. As he puts it, "Trivialities could mean everything. They could be all-decisive."

What makes this novel so compulsively readable? Very little happens; the "action" moments are dinner parties, husband-and-wife squabbles, encounters with the alcoholic Russian neighbor from hell and long philosophical conversations with his lifelong best friend. But watching Karl Ove doubt his own goodness, wrestle with and expose himself (often while changing diapers) becomes the most intimate human experience. The reader engages with the mind of a thoughtful man who is honestly trying to capture the essence of his life in language, whose self-questioning becomes our own. --Nick DiMartino

Shelf Talker: The stand-alone second volume of Knausgaard's masterful examination of life explores the emotional fluctuations of a marriage with the complication of children.

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