MOTHER'S DAY SPECIALS! SHOW ME MORE

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

On the Calculation of Volume I

Solvej Balle Barbara J. Haveland

$26.99

Paperback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Faber & Faber
15 April 2025
'A total explosion.' Nicole Krauss 'Unforgettable.' Hernan Daz 'Breathtaking.' Chetna Maroo 'Brilliant.' Jon McGregor 'Absolutely marvellous.' Lauren Groff

* AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER NOW

* A NEW YORKER AND PARIS REVIEW BOOK OF THE YEAR

It seems so odd to me now, how one can be so unsettled by the improbable. When we know that our entire existence is founded on freak occurrences and improbable coincidences. That we wouldn't be here at all if it weren't for these curious twists of fate.

The first volume of the poetic, page-turning masterpiece about one woman's fall through the cracks of time.

Tara Selter has slipped out of time.

Every morning, she wakes up to the 18th of November. She no longer expects to wake up to the 19th of November, and she no longer remembers the 17th of November as if it were yesterday.

She comes to know the shape of the day like the back of her hand - the grey morning light in her Paris hotel; the moment a blackbird breaks into song; her husband's surprise at seeing her return home unannounced. But for everyone around her, this day is lived for the first and only time. They do not remember the other 18ths of November, and they do not believe her when she tries to explain.

As Tara approaches her 365th 18th of November, she can't shake the feeling that somewhere underneath the surface of this day, there's a way to escape.

WINNER OF THE 2022 NORDIC COUNCIL LITERATURE PRIZE
By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Faber & Faber
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   Main
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 135mm, 
ISBN:   9780571383375
ISBN 10:   0571383378
Pages:   192
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Solvej Balle was born in 1962 and made her debut in 1986 with Lyrefugl (Lyrebird.) She went on to write one of the 1990s' most acclaimed works of Danish literature, Iflge loven (1993) ('According to the Law: Four Accounts of Mankind', translated by Barbara Haveland.) On Calculation of Volume is Solvej Balle's return to literary stardom after nearly 30 years.

Reviews for On the Calculation of Volume I

'What the best novels can do is open up spaces. And she has opened a space in time, and it is absolutely, absolutely incredible. I think it's a fantastic book.' -- Karl Ove Knausgrd 'Solvej Balle is a prodigious writer who, miraculously, finds the subtlest, most fascinating differences in repetition. You have never read anything like On the Calculation of Volume. This unforgettable novel is a profound meditation on the lonely, untranslatable ways in which each one of us inhabits time-and the tenuous yet indelible traces we leave in the world. Day after day.' -- Hernan Diaz 'A total explosion; Solvej Balle has blown through to a new dimension of literary exploration.' -- Nicole Krauss 'I loved it. I found it such a strange and haunting book, given tremendous power by its childlike sense of fable, and the slowly rising sense of true dread; an essential tale in which narrator, and reader, are somehow trapped.' -- Lucy Caldwell 'A masterpiece of its time.' Nordic Council Literature Prize Jury 'The overarching theme of the fragility of the physical and regular world is intellectually thought-provoking, not least in a climate crisis context. And if you surrender to the language, you get an unusual aesthetic experience that triggers questions about literature itself. This is catalytic literature, which not only touches but also moves one forward, emotionally as well as intellectually.' -- Fedja Wierd Borcak Bors Tidning (Sweden) 'A steady, careful, and deeply disquieting estrangement of a single day, it is impossible to put down.' -- Kate Briggs 'A momentous, quietly subversive work: a close up of a married woman confronting the question of how to inhabit her days as the world around her all but stands still. On the Calculation of Volume vibrates with possibility. It's breathtaking, at times heart-stopping - and totally unexpected. A classic in the making.' -- Chetna Maroo 'I found On the Calculation of Volume utterly propulsive. 'There is nothing to do but follow the day' writes Tara, the narrator, on November 18th #176. I feel I'd follow Tara through this repeated day no matter how many times she experiences it. She stretches a new kind of noticing onto the stable template of the day, so that each takes on unique qualities and textures. The result is a strange, magnetic book which left me questioning my own experiences of stuckness, asking myself what can be gained from finding oneself caught in an everlasting present, and whether I'd have Tara's hope that I could break free into a new day. I absolutely love this book and am longing for the next volume.' -- Amy Key 'In On the Calculation of Volume Balle does something unexpected and extraordinary: using repetition and monotony not to create a sense of stability or calm, but instead to steadily move towards an unravelling - of reality, of love, of time itself. It is a mysterious and fascinating read, and by the second half it started to slowly break my heart. I not only want to read the next volume, I think I need to.' -- Jenny Mustard 'A literary phenomenon nearly 40 years in the making. It's a speculative masterwork and the long-awaited comeback of a now-62-year-old writer whose breakthrough, the 1993 short-story collection According to the Law: Four Accounts of Mankind, made her an international sensation.' The Cut 'A startling exploration of profound questions about language, human connection, and time.' New Yorker 'If Samuel Beckett had written Groundhog Day, it might read something like On the Calculation of Volume. The first volume unfolds like an existential mystery, a temporal whodunit. . . . Written in intermittent diary-like entries of varying length, On the Calculation of Volume is at once scrupulously realistic and intriguingly speculative. . . . the novel's propulsive imaginative brilliance lies in Tara's metaphoric search for a language with which to communicate the sheer incomprehensibility of her condition.' Washington Post


See Also