Things like skiing, folklore, and fishing might come to mind when thinking about Norway. But as your Norwegian campaign manager, I’m here to tell you that Norway has so much more to offer than trolls and salmon. With its rich literature, culture, and history, Norway has a vibrant literary tradition waiting to be discovered. Let’s dive into some Norwegian book recommendations!

Nordic Noir: Gritty, Atmospheric, and Unputdownable

Nordic noir is one of the most popular subgenres of thrillers. It’s often characterized by simple, direct language, but the stories themselves are anything but simple.

1222 by Anne Holt

book cover for 1222

Snow is a staple of Norwegian life, although it is beautiful yet dangerous. This is especially true when you find yourself trapped in a hotel during an apocalyptic snowstorm. When a man is shot and killed, panic sets in. There’s no help and no way out. Fortunately, among the stranded guests is a retired female police inspector. With time running out, she must solve the murder before the storm claims even more lives.

Exploring Dark Themes: Norway’s Thought-Provoking Fiction

Norwegian authors don’t shy away from heavy topics. One of the country’s most acclaimed contemporary writers, Maja Lunde, has made waves with her gripping environmental dystopia, The History of Bees.

The History of Bees by Maja Lunde

book cover for The History of Bees

England, 1852. United States, 2007. China, 2098.
Imagine a world without bees—this is the chilling reality in The History of Bees. The novel weaves three interconnected narratives, illustrating bees’ vital role in maintaining environmental balance and sustaining life. But beyond its ecological themes, the book also explores human relationships, communities, and our connection to nature.

Community and Tradition: Stories Rooted in Norwegian Culture

Whether nestled in remote mountain villages or bustling cities, Norwegian communities are built on strong bonds of trust and reliance. This theme is beautifully captured in many works of Norwegian literature.

The Bell in the Lake by Lars Mytting

book cover for The Bell in the Lake

Set in a small village, this novel revolves around an ancient stave church and the young woman tied to its fate. It’s a sweeping tale of tradition, faith, and the tension between superstition and progress. A mesmerizing read for those interested in historical fiction with a deep cultural backdrop.

A Modern Family by Helga Flatland

book cover of A Modern Family

Helga Flatland is a master at capturing the Norwegian spirit through deeply human, realistic storytelling. A Modern Family dissects the seemingly perfect modern family, revealing the gaps between what we think we know about our loved ones and what truly lies beneath the surface. It’s a novel about identity, relationships, and the facades we maintain—even within our own families.

A Norwegian Classic: Henrik Ibsen’s Timeless Masterpiece

No discussion of Norwegian literature would be complete without Henrik Ibsen—often called Norway’s Shakespeare.

A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen

book cover for A Doll's House

One of the most famous plays in Norwegian literature, A Doll’s House, is a revolutionary feminist work that shook Victorian society. It follows Nora, a woman trapped in the constraints of marriage and patriarchy, as she embarks on a journey of self-discovery. A must-read for fans of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper.

Norwegian literature goes beyond the stereotypes, offering gripping thrillers, thought-provoking dystopias, and rich cultural stories. Whatever your taste, there’s a Norwegian book for you.

Read the World #2

Last month we started our Read the World series with the Netherlands, check out the blog here. This month we travel to Australia to discover some authors from Australia’s First Nation people.

Australia has a small but thriving publishing scene. While you’ve probably heard of Australian authors like Jay Kristoff, Amie Kaufman, and Lynette Noni (who we love!), there’s a treasure trove of stories and diversity across our country.

Australia’s First Nation peoples are the Aboriginal Peoples and Torres Strait Islanders. They have a long history of storytelling, and modern publishing is no exception.

Here’s a few Aboriginal authors you should check out.

The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf by Ambelin Kwaymullina

Fiction, SciFi/Dystopian, YA

Ashala Wolf has been captured by Chief Administrator Neville Rose, a man intent on destroying Ashala’s Tribe – the runaway Illegals hiding in the Firstwood. Injured and with her Sleepwalker ability blocked, Ashala is forced to succumb to the machine that will pull secrets from her mind. And right beside her is Justin Connor, her betrayer, watching her every move.

This is book one in Ambelin’s The Tribe series. It tells the story of a world after an apocalypse, where some people have begun to have magical abilities, and are persecuted and detained for it. Ashala Wolf attempts to fight these injustices in her system and save the group of runaways she leads.

If you’re after a dystopian fix with a courageous female lead and a touch of enemies to lovers, this is for you.

Ambelin Kwaymullina is a First Nations writer and illustrator who comes from the Palyku people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

Paris Dreaming by Anita Heiss

Fiction, Contemporary Romance, Adult

Libby has given up on romance. After all, she has her three best girlfriends and two cats to keep her company at night, and her high-powered job at the National Aboriginal Gallery in Canberra to occupy her day – isn’t that enough?

But when fate gives Libby the chance to work in Paris at the Musée du Quai Branly, she’s thrown out of her comfort zone and into a city full of culture, fashion and love.

Surrounded by thousands of gorgeous men, romance has suddenly become a lot more tempting.

This book is perfect if you’re looking for a light hearted, fun romcom, especially one that includes travel!

Anita is a proud member of the Wiradjuri nation of central New South Wales.

Growing Up Aboriginal in Australia by Various Authors, edited by Anita Heiss

Non Fiction, Memoir, Essays

What is it like to grow up Aboriginal in Australia? This anthology, compiled by award-winning author Anita Heiss, showcases many diverse voices, experiences and stories in order to answer that question.

Accounts from well-known authors and high-profile identities sit alongside those from newly discovered writers of all ages. All of the contributors speak from the heart – sometimes calling for empathy, oftentimes challenging stereotypes, always demanding respect.

This groundbreaking collection will enlighten, inspire and educate about the lives of Aboriginal people in Australia today.

Contributors include: Tony Birch, Deborah Cheetham, Adam Goodes, Terri Janke, Patrick Johnson, Ambelin Kwaymullina, Jack Latimore, Celeste Liddle, Amy McQuire, Kerry Reed-Gilbert, Miranda Tapsell, Jared Thomas, Aileen Walsh, Alexis West, Tara June Winch, and many, many more.

Growing Up Torres Strait Islander in Australia by Various Authors, edited by Samantha Faulkner

The Torres Strait Islands are an archipelago of at least 274 small islands in the Torres Strait, a waterway separating far north Queensland and the island of New Guinea.

Non-Fiction, Memoir, Essays

Discover stories of going dugong hunting and eating mango marinated in soy sauce. The smell of sugar cane and frangipani-scented sea breeze. Family, grandmothers and canoe time. Dancing, singing, weaving hats and making furniture from bamboo. Training as a doctor and advocating for healthcare for the Torres Strait. The loneliness of being caught between two cultures. Mission life, disconnection and being evacuated to the mainland during World War II. “Is that really your mum? Why is she black?”. Not being Islander enough. Working hard to reconnect to your roots, and claiming back land and culture.

With contributions by: Ellen Armstrong, Tetei Bakic-Tapim, Jimi Bani, Leilani Bin-Juda, Jillian Boyd-Bowie, Tahlia Bowie, Aaliyah Jade Bradbury, John Doolah, Donisha Duff, Aaron Fa’Aoso with Michelle Scott Tucker, Ellie Gaffney, Velma Gara, Jaqui Hughes, Adam C. Lees, Rhett Loban, Thomas Lowah, Edward Koiki Mabo with Noel Loos, Thomas Mayo, Lenora Thaker, Sorren Thomas, Ina Titasey as told to Catherine Titasey, Lockeah Wapau and Daniella Williams.

To wrap things up, here’s one rec for the fae fans.

Valentine by Jodi McAlister

Fiction, Urban Fantasy, YA

Strange and terrible things begin to happen to four teenagers – all born on the same Valentine’s Day. One of these teenagers is the Valentine: a Seelie fairy changeling swapped for a human child at its birth. The Unseelie have come to kill the Valentine – except they don’t know who it is.

Pearl shares a birthday with Finn Blacklin. She’s known him all her life and disliked every second of it. But now Pearl and Finn must work together to protect themselves from the sinister forces that are seeking them out.

Smart girls and murderous fairies in a small Australian town. Picnic at Hanging Rock meets Holly Black in the Valentine trilogy, as Pearl Linford sets about smashing the faetriarchy.

If you want to read about some fae in Australia, with a girl who knows her pop culture, this book is for you.

Jodi is originally from Kiama, a seaside holiday town on the south coast of New South Wales. Currently, she lives in Melbourne.

Kat, @stars.and.embers on Instagram, loves all things nerdy and fantasy. She is currently writing to you from Naarm/Melbourne.

Read the world #1

Read Around The World challenges are popping up on a lot of platforms at the moment, and we love to see it! I am personally doing a European challenge, because there are a lot of countries where I have never read a book from. (And honestly, reading a book from every country in the world makes me overwhelmed – so I’m thinking of doing this continent by continent). Anyway, if you want to join in on this challenge, we’re here to help you. In the upcoming year we will be sharing our best recs – and I’m kicking off as a Dutchie with 10 books from The Netherlands you should read.

LITERARY FICTION

Thistle – Nadia de Vries

I love to read weird girl literature. I’m totally the Ottessa Moshfesh kind of girl who also loves Japanese books such as The Girl Who Turned Into A Pair of Chopsticks and The Hole. Thistle is written beautifully, covering themes like girlhood, sexuality and grief.

Thistle is a young woman whose father, a pilot, dies suddenly in a plane crash when she is thirteen years old. The airline’s compensation pay out is substantial but doesn’t assuage the family’s grief. By the time she is seventeen, Thistle has lost most of her teenage years trying to make sense of her father’s premature death. In the meantime, her body is developing, and she finds herself sexualized and objectified by men against her will. Teenaged Thistle is increasingly aware of her allure but unsure of how to use that to her advantage. When her mother gifts her a camera, Thistle decides to turn the lens on herself, capturing her nude body in various poses just before she turns eighteen.

Hard Copy – Fien Veldman

This is one of my favourite Dutch books! If you liked Sayaka Murata and Halle Butler, this one is for you. This is a story about a customer service assistant who meets a printer (and talks to it) and spends her long workdays printing letters. Her one friend is the printer and, in the dark confines of her office, she begins to open up to him, talking about her fears, her past, her hopes and dreams. To her, it seems like a beautiful friendship is blossoming. To her boss, it seems like she’s losing her mind. Diagnosed with burnout and placed on leave, she faces severance and – worse – separation from her beloved printer. But she’s not about to give up on her only friend without a fight. And, it turns out, neither is he. Give this debut novel a chance, you won’t regret it!

Mary, or The Birth of Frankenstein – Anne Eekhout

Looking for a historical fiction with some dark academia vibes? And did you love Frankenstein? Put Mary by Anne Eekhout on your list. It tells a fictional story about Mary’s early years, before she wrote the popular classic. ‘A bold new framing for questions about where we draw lines: between queerness and heterosexuality, the natural and the unnatural, and the imaginary and the real…’, wrote The New Yorker.

As darkness falls and storms rage over Lake Geneva, a group of friends gather in a candle-lit-villa. Among them are eighteen-year-old Mary and her mercurial lover Percy Shelley. As laudanum stirs their feverish imaginations, their host Lord Byron challenges everyone to write a ghost story. Suddenly Mary is transported back to a long, strange summer in the wilds of Scotland, where she fell in love with the enigmatic Isabella Baxter. As she remembers, something fierce and terrifying awakes within her. Now she will unleash it into the world.

GRAPHIC NOVELS

The Philosopher, the Dog and the Wedding – Barbara Stok

Looking for a graphic novel? I would recommend this one by Barbara Stok, which is about Hipparchia, one of the first female philosophers. This book shows us that the insights from thousands of years ago are still relevant today. Crates and Hipparchia were part of the cynical philosophy. In ancient Athens, the Cynics formed a provocative movement against all conventional values. One of their fundamental principles was that we can only attain true happiness if we are independent of material possessions and social position. Hipparchia was a strong woman who had the courage to live by her own ideals, despite all the prevailing beliefs of her time.

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

Movies Showing Nowhere – Yorick Goldewijk

A middle grade read that won a lot of prizes in The Netherlands is Movies Showing Nowhere by Yorick Goldewijk. And I can see why, because this book made me tear up several times and showed me how to deal with grief. It’s stunning, a children’s book that you want to recommend to everyone despite their age. If you like books by Rebecca Stead, you will love Yorick Goldewijk.
On the day Cate came into the world, her mum left it. Her dad is often distant and silent, so she keeps herself entertained with kung fu films, her pet rabbit and her photography. Then one afternoon Cate receives a mysterious invitation to an abandoned cinema, and everything changes. Soon Cate meets the peculiar Mrs Kano and discovers a most unusual kind of movie screen – the kind that lets you step through it into a memory. So begins a wonder-filled adventure through time that will teach Cate the true meaning of love, loss and learning to let go.

Lampie (UK) or Of Salt And Shore (USA) – Annet Schaap

This middle grade novel takes the dark stuff of fairytales and crafts it into a powerful story of friendship and light. An absolute bestseller in The Netherlands. If you like books set by the coast, want something hopeful and love fairytales – you’ll love Lampie. I read this book a few years ago and I’m still thinking about it.
Every evening Lampie, the lighthouse keeper’s daughter, must light a lantern to warn ships away from the rocks, but one stormy night disaster strikes. The lantern is not lit, a ship is wrecked, and someone must pay. To work off her debt, Lampie is banished to the Admiral’s lonely house, where a monster is rumored to live. The terrors inside the house aren’t quite what she thought they would be – they are even stranger. After Lampie saves the life of the neglected, deformed son of the admiral, a boy she calls Fish, they form a
close bond. Soon they are pulled into a fairytale adventure swimming with mermaids, pirates, and misfits. Lampie will discover the courage to fight for friendship, knowledge, and the freedom to be different.

NONFICTION

Amsterdam: A History of the World’s Most Liberal City – Russell Shorto

Do you want to read more about the history of The Netherlands, and specifically Amsterdam? Amsterdam: A History of the World’s Most Liberal City is the one to go for. Tourists know Amsterdam as a picturesque city of low-slung brick houses lining tidy canals; student travellers know it for its legal brothels and hash bars; art lovers know it for Rembrandt’s glorious portraits. But the deeper history is all about freedom, liberalism and protests.
Amsterdam is the font of liberalism, in both its senses. Tolerance for free thinking and free love make it a place where, in the words of one of its mayors, “craziness is a value.” But the city also fostered the deeper meaning of liberalism, one that profoundly influenced America: political and economic freedom. Amsterdam was home not only to religious dissidents and radical thinkers but to the world’s first great global corporation.

Why the Dutch are Different – Ben Coates

Coates, who is originally from England moved to The Netherlands accidentally and never left. In his books he writes about his experiences with the Dutch – from their directness to their love for cheese. A fun, light and quick read for it you want to know more about the Dutch culture. In this book Coates takes readers into the heart of his adopted country, going beyond the usual tourist attractions and cliches to explore what it is that makes the Dutch the Dutch, the difference between Holland and the Netherlands, and why the colour orange so important. A travelogue, a history and a personal account of a changing country.

The Diary of Anne Frank – Anne Frank

A must-read since it’s one of the most enduring documents of the 20th century: The Diary of Anne Frank. Even if you don’t live in The Netherlands, you must have heard of Anne Frank. Anne was a Jewish girl that lived in Amsterdam in the 1940s. When Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands, Anne and her family hid in an attic in an attempt to escape the persecution of Jews. For over two years, Anne wrote in her diary with an awareness that was extremely mature for her age. She detailed her experiences and insights while she and her family were in hiding, living in a constant fear of being arrested. The Diary of Anne Frank is a record of her understanding of the war and showcases her storytelling abilities in such horrific circumstances. In 1944, the Franks were found and sent to concentration camps. Anne died before she turned 16.

If you want to join in on this blog series and would like to recommend books from your own country, feel free to send us an email to jenny@bookinfluencers.com!