“How
I Spend My Days and My Nights” by Håkan
Nesser Novellix, 2019
Swedish crime writer, Håkan Nesser’s
“How I Spend My Days and My Nights”—originally published in the Swedish
magazine Allas in 2006—is a splendid, if blisteringly dark, psychological
chiller that haunts the reader long after the last page. On a rainy November
evening, Marteen, a successful novelist, stops on his way home at Harry’s Bar
for a quiet drink. His wife, Marlene, is away on business and a quick drink
is excuse enough to escape the rain and postpone his arrival to their empty
apartment. Harry’s
Bar is empty except for the bartender and a man drinking alone at the bar. After
Marteen orders a double scotch, a pitcher of water, and a towel (to dry himself
from the rain), and before he can find a table, the lone drinker introduces
himself as David Perowne. And while Marteen has never heard of Perowne, the
stranger tells him a nasty and unbelievable story about Marlene. But it’s a
story that could change everything in Marteen’s life. “How
I Spend My Days and My Nights” is astonishingly good. With a deceptively simple
narrative, Nesser seamlessly builds the mystery around the question, is Perowne’s
tale about Marlene true? And just as relevant, does it matter if it is
true? The Hitchcockian premise is jazzed by a hint of wobbling character
reliability, tension, and potential betrayal. Then there are those last
few sentences that change everything with an ironic and gut-wrenching twist.
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I read “How I
Spend My Days and My Nights” in a cool standalone paperback edition from
Swedish publisher, Novellix. It was part of a four-book boxed-set called Swedish
Crime, which includes stories by Arne Dahl, Karin Tidbeck, and Henning
Mankell. “How
I Spend My Days and My Nights” was obviously translated from its original
Swedish, but no translator is noted in the Novellix edition.
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