Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
The Paris Review

Tove Jansson on Writer’s Block

Tove Jansson

During a recent trip to Stockholm, I came across a new collection of stories and essays by Tove Jansson in a bookstore. Though Jansson is perhaps best known as the creator of the Moomin series, her writing for adults is vast and varied. I have translated two of the essays from that new collection into English for the first time. The first, “The Island,” . The second, “Once, at a park,” here below, is a beautifully scattered, rhapsodic piece that defies genre conventions. Again, there are torsions in time and tense; again, the syntax can be somewhat shattered—and (again) there is a joyful disregard for the boundaries separating fiction, memoir, and essay. I have tried to retain, for the most part, the slight disquiet and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Paris Review

The Paris Review1 min read
Two Poems by Matt Broaddus
When I was regionalthey let me have handsdelicately they let me out of the factory I was freeto draw lines with borrowed handsfailing to reproducethe one treegrowing sideways out of the one coffee shopsuch were the nutritional demandsof the national
The Paris Review1 min read
From “Section Of Adoring Nocturnes”
Stellatundra, Albadune, Whiteout,Zebranivem, Faloop’njoompoola. —Engaland, she said. Or a crystal bead of meager bees, a noctifuge suitcaseon the tip of the tongue. Give me loops.Give me turtles. O remolino de abejas marronesen un veliz “noctífugo.”
The Paris Review27 min read
The Art of Poetry No. 117
I first heard Rosmarie Waldrop read when I was seventeen, visiting my elder brother at Brown. She was reading from what would become Reluctant Gravities (1999), the third book in the trilogy of prose poems later collected as Curves to the Apple (2006

Related Books & Audiobooks