The winners : a novel / Fredrik Backman ; translated by Neil Smith.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781982112790
- ISBN: 1982112794
- Physical Description: 673 pages ; 24 cm
- Publisher: New York : Atria Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc., 2022.
- Copyright: ©2021
Content descriptions
General Note: | Translation of: Vinnarna. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Small cities > Fiction. Storms > Fiction. Hockey stories. Rivalries > Fiction. Violence > Fiction. Revenge > Fiction. |
Genre: | Sports fiction. |
Available copies
- 62 of 70 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
- 3 of 5 copies available at Jefferson County.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 70 total copies.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jefferson County Library-Arnold | F BACKMAN Fredrik (Text) | 30000024895108 | Fiction | Available | - |
Jefferson County Library-Arnold | F BACKMAN Fredrik (Text) | 30061100096987 | Fiction | Checked out | 05/13/2024 |
Jefferson County Library-Cedar Hill | F BACKMAN Fredrik (Text)
Digital Bookplate:
Purchased with A&E Funds -- 2022
|
30031100116119 | Fiction | Available | - |
Jefferson County Library-Northwest | F BACKMAN Fredrik (Text) | 30051100096996 | Fiction | Available | - |
Jefferson County Library-Windsor | F BACKMAN Fredrik (Text) | 30065100097002 | Fiction | Checked out | 05/01/2024 |
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Kirkus Review
The Winners : A Novel
Kirkus Reviews
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Life continues haltingly for the inhabitants of Beartown and its rival borough, Hed. As in the two earlier books in this series (Beartown, 2017; Us Against You, 2018), things are never settled between these two hockey-obsessed towns in the forests of Sweden. Only one can seemingly do well at a time--resourcewise or hockeywise; the two are interchangeable--and their residents share a mutual, pathological hatred. Beloved characters return, new ones are introduced, tragedy is promised. Backman repeatedly tells the reader about his characters' overwhelming love for each other, but their ability to actually care for one another comes and goes with the demands of the unwieldy plot. He wants to assure readers that this makes his characters complex, but it really renders them pawns. To stoke the conflict between the towns, he includes not only the pregnancy-ending factory accident of a nameless woman (ushering in a suspiciously out-of-place anti-abortion sentiment), but also the murder of a beloved dog. These machinations are not alone in being soppy and unearned. The book is almost 700 pages long and covers only a two-week span. Backman writes with wit and sincerity and is a talented web-spinner, but with a tale this long, the lack of nuance becomes grating. There's also a brief "not all men" message that, given the toxic nature of the narrative, is hard to ignore. A moralistic noir masquerading as a heart-warmer. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Publishers Weekly Review
The Winners : A Novel
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Backman (Anxious People) wraps up his Beartown trilogy with the satisfying if overlong tale of two small towns and their inhabitants' traumas and rivalries. After a storm collapses the roof of the hockey rink in Hed, the town's club must share the rink in Beartown, stoking long-held resentments between the clubs. To make matters worse, the editor of Beartown's newspaper discovers someone from Beartown's club is embezzling tax revenue. Meanwhile, after 14-year-old Matteo's older sister dies from a drug overdose, Matteo grows increasingly bitter toward the people from the two towns, who show little regard for his family's problems, and he eventually becomes violent. Backman's narration often feels heavy-handed, and his aphorisms alternate from opaque to obvious ("Guilt is stronger than logic"; "In hockey we know who the winners are, because winners win"). Moreover, many of the chapter-length asides are entirely too aside and lead nowhere. The tension, however, remains palpable after a former hockey player returns to Beartown and everyone assumes he's out to settle a score, and a series of threats escalate into explosive violence and a painful resolution. This will do the trick for insatiable Beartown fans, though others can take a pass. (Oct.)
BookList Review
The Winners : A Novel
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Billed as the conclusion of the Beartown series, the new novel by the award-winning Swedish author Backman (A Man Called Ove, 2014) is set two-and-a-half years after the town of Bjornstad was torn apart by the rape of a teenage girl by a junior hockey player. Readers unfamiliar with Beartown (2016) and its sequel Us against You (2017) need to know one thing: Bjornstad and the nearby Hed are, above all, hockey towns. After the tragic events recounted in the first book, Bjornstad's hockey team faltered, allowing Hed's to rise to prominence. Now, as the town still struggles to put itself back together, things happen that will force each resident to confront his or her darkest thoughts. This is a dramatic and highly satisfying novel, building on themes introduced in the first two books and brilliantly drawing the reader deeply into the story. The translation by Neil Smith (who has also translated novels by Lars Kepler and Liza Marklund) is nimble and idiomatic, perfectly conveying Backman's love of language and his wonderful sense of humor. If this really is the last Beartown novel, it's a hell of a conclusion to an outstanding series.