by Helene Tursten
translated from Swedish by Marlaine Delargy
Soho Press
ISBN: 978-1-64129-011-1
185 pp. $12.99
Publication date: Nov. 6, 2018
I cannot resist any book about a badass biddy. I've written about the nasty senior citizen women characters found in novels of Shelley Smith, Anthony Gilbert, Ethel Lina White and even an old lady serial killer whose garden is a veritable poisoner's paradise. But not since my meeting Lucilla Teatime in Lonelyheart 4122 have I encountered such a wily, deadly and unexpectedly amusing old lady as Maud, Helene Tursten's 88 year-old spinster who will not have her tranquil easy-going life upset by anyone.
An Elderly Lady Is Up to No Good is a collection of five short stories each of them detailing Maud's past life and her current reign of terror in an apartment building located in Göteborg, Sweden. Through a legal loophole Maud has been able to live in her apartment rent free her entire life and her neighbors are not too happy about it. They've managed to get her to pay a monthly assessment to help with upkeep and maintenance of the building, but as for any other expense Maud has managed to keep every krona since the end of World War 2. And she's not about to give up her home to anyone who ruffles her feathers in any way.
Each of the five stories begins with an inoffensive slight that most of us would dismiss as minor irritation. But not Maud. Be it an intrusively friendly neighbor, a squabbling couple in the apartment above her, or the news of her ex-fiance getting married at the age of ninety Maud finds the highest personal affronts in the most innocuous events. In each instance she is compelled to take drastic measures, often to deadly extremes.
Conveniently, in most cases the slights Maud suffers turn out to be covers for more insidious designs and ulterior motives as in the first story about an obnoxious modern artist whose horrifying sculptures express her disdain for the patriarchy. Jasmin is a figure of obvious ridicule, a parody of the worst of ultra feminism compounded by talentless dabbling in modern art. The story is both a satire of the insanity of modern art and a nasty story of revenge that calls to mind Roald Dahl's wicked sense of humor. Jasmin's latest creation -- a disgustingly laughable mobile of monstrous penises suspended from a height of sixteen feet and dubbed "Phallus III Hanging" -- inspires in Maud nothing vaguely approaching an appreciation of art but rather an ultimatum that deliciously sums up Tursten's ideas of art criticism. In each of the stories Maud's solutions to her various "problems" become ever increasingly violent and deadly.
Helene Tursten (photo ©Peter Knuston) |
As an added bonus the final two stories feature Tursten's series police characters better known from her novels - Irene Huss and Embla Nyström. They investigate the death of an antique dealer who met a grisly death in Maud's apartment while she apparently was on vacation. The murder investigation is told in two separate stories: the first ("The Antique Dealer's Death") is told from the viewpoint of an elderly neighbor, in the second ("An Elderly Lady Is Faced with a Difficult Dilemma") Maud's viewpoint sheds light on the ambiguous details of the crime with a two page coda told from the police women's viewpoint. These final two tales (which must be read in the order in which they appear in the book) reveal Maud at her most diabolical and criminally inventive self.
This is a slight book easily polished off in only a couple of hours. Yet each story packs a wallop. Tursten can mix black humor with poignancy and have us rooting for Maud to commit the most horrific atrocities and long for her to get away with everything. Her victims may be truly awful people, but is Maud truly worse than them? She is a woman who seems to no longer care about anything now that she is in her twilight years. All that matters to her are life's simple pleasures -- travel to foreign countries, warm climates and cool breezes, peace and quiet in her rent free home, and a nice cheese sandwich and a bottle of Carlsberg while watching old movies on TV.
Here is a book highly recommended for those with a penchant for dark farcical comedy and evil thoughts of delicious revenge perpetrated on the ugly people who have wronged us.
This one sounds like fun.
ReplyDeleteThis heavy dose of imaginative revenge came just at the right time. Tursten concocted a delightful, cathartic and vicarious thrill.
DeleteAn added joy is that this book is a small 4 X 6 inch hardback. I just love small hardbound books as one rarely encounters them these days.
ReplyDeleteThere's another volume of these stories that was recently published entitled 'An Elderly Lady Must Not Be Crossed'. I hope to read it soon.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the reminder, Ted. I saw a review of the new volume a few months ago. She’s younger in these new stories, isn’t she? Tales from her past, I think. The book is on my purchase list for 2022.
DeleteI was finally able to check this book out from my public library. Yes, you are correct that she is younger in four of the six stories. On a flight to South Africa she remembers four earlier adventures. The final and longest story set mainly in South Africa really make me wonder if there will be any more of these 'Elderly Lady' stories.
ReplyDelete