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Johanna Sinisalo

Author of Troll: A Love Story

23+ Works 2,156 Members 66 Reviews 13 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Johanna Sinisalo

Troll: A Love Story (2000) 972 copies
The Core of the Sun (2013) 299 copies
Birdbrain (2008) 133 copies
The Blood of Angels (2014) 117 copies
Iron Sky [2012 film] (2012) — Author — 83 copies
Sankarit (2003) 74 copies
Lasisilmä (2006) 56 copies
Renaten tarina (2018) 22 copies
Ukkoshuilu (2021) 19 copies
Vieraat : romaani (2020) 17 copies
Verkon silmässä : tarinoita internetin maailmasta (2005) — Editor; Contributor — 11 copies
Baby Doll 8 copies
Kätketyt (2006) 8 copies
Tiskivuoro (2016) 3 copies
Tapahtui Muumilaaksossa (2009) 2 copies

Associated Works

The Big Book of Science Fiction (2016) — Contributor — 423 copies
The Beastly Bride: Tales of the Animal People (2010) — Contributor — 194 copies
Year's Best SF 13 (2008) — Contributor — 192 copies
Nordic Visions: The Best of Nordic Speculative Fiction (2023) — Contributor — 32 copies
Kultainen naamio (1993) — Contributor — 31 copies
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 4 (2017) — Contributor — 28 copies

Tagged

anthology (245) collection (16) dystopia (39) ebook (39) fairy tales (20) fantasy (280) fiction (457) Finland (94) Finnish (90) Finnish literature (59) gay (17) gender (15) homosexuality (15) horror (45) in Finnish (16) Kindle (18) kotimainen kaunokirjallisuus (18) lgbt (15) library (15) literature (15) magical realism (37) non-fiction (20) novel (34) novellit (40) paperback (24) queer (21) read (55) science fiction (389) sf (110) sff (31) short stories (237) speculative fiction (55) spefi (15) Suomi (20) to-read (274) translation (32) trolls (32) unread (46) urban fantasy (15) wishlist (18)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

I liked this strange book that examined the effects of a dystopia that required strict gender roles. The plot was slow and translation felt a bit dry, but the overall effect was interesting and I liked the chili pepper woowoo.
 
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mslibrarynerd | 14 other reviews | Jan 13, 2024 |
https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/giants-at-the-end-of-the-world-a-showcase-of-fin...

This was given as a freebie to all attenders of Worldcon 75 in Helsinki back in 2017, to boost the visibility of Finnish writers among attendees. To be honest the stories are skewed a little more towards horror than is my usual taste, but I really enjoyed the first one, “The Haunted House on Rockville Street” by Pasi Ilmari Jääskeläinen, and one in the very middle, “The Bearer of the Bone Harp”, by Emmi Itäranta.… (more)
 
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nwhyte | Jan 7, 2024 |
Hey guys. This book was like riding a rollercoaster and it's nice and smooth at first so you get overconfident about how not fucked up you're going to get on that first drop - and then suddenly it hits, your ass leaves the seat, you're clawing at the harness, and swearing you will NEVER ride another coaster again. And when it's done you're like HOLY FUCK THAT WAS COOL.

So yeah. I liked it. There were moments where I was like "this could be more interesting" and in other places I thought the translation maybe seemed lacking although it's hard to tell, but once I finished I think I would've been less stunned after being punched in the face.

I'd definitely recommend for people that like modern dystopian settings mixed with a bit of the unbelievable.

Ending spoilers ahead:

I loved how the end was open to interpretation. If you think the spirit possession was real you can attribute this idea into how spiritualism/ritualism is discriminated against by "polite" society and that the chilis here represent other means of trance inducement from other cultures, such as peyote.

And if you don't believe that the spirit possession was real it can be explained by the fact that Vera is a very intelligent woman and once she had the background information on Harri and his gambling, plus the information he told her in the bathroom, that she could've deduced the human trafficking scenario and hallucinated that she saved Mira's spirit and keeps it safe inside her mind, either to ease her own guilt or a way to keep Mira in her thoughts always etc.

In the end I do like how the message is that humans will always corrupt - no matter how strict, well meaning, and kind those in power are (even though the Authority here really is NOT), there will always be others that take advantage of the unseen places and gouge out 'seedy underbellies'.
… (more)
 
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zozopuff | 14 other reviews | Dec 19, 2022 |
Interesting premise, but the characters didn’t hold me and the epistolary structure annoyed me.
 
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invisiblecityzen | 14 other reviews | Mar 13, 2022 |

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Associated Authors

Lola Rogers Translator
Boris Hurtta Contributor
David Hackston Translator
Jouko Sirola Contributor
Sari Peltoniemi Contributor
Leena Krohn Contributor
Jyrki Vainonen Contributor
Anne Leinonen Contributor
Hannu Mänttäri Cover artist
Juhani Peltonen Contributor
Tove Jansson Contributor
Arto Paasilinna Contributor
Mika Waltari Contributor
Maarit Verronen Contributor
Markku Paasonen Contributor
Satu Waltari Contributor
Aino Kallas Contributor
Pentti Holappa Contributor
Bo Carpelan Contributor
Aleksis Kivi Contributor
Erno Paasilinna Contributor
Olli Jalonen Contributor
Laibach Composer
Udo Kier Actor
Leena Likitalo Contributor
Emmi Itäranta Contributor
Anni Nupponen Contributor
Jenny Kangasvuo Contributor
Miina Supinen Contributor
Hannu Rajaniemi Contributor
Tiina Raevaara Contributor
Juha Itkonen Contributor
Sari Mikkonen Contributor
Markku Pääskynen Contributor
Jari Järvelä Contributor
Taavi Soininvaara Contributor
Riikka Ala-Harja Contributor
Jyrki J. Kasvi Contributor
Laura Honkasalo Contributor
Sofi Oksanen Contributor
Angela Plöger Translator
Herbert Lomas Translator
Edit G. Bogár Translator

Statistics

Works
23
Also by
31
Members
2,156
Popularity
#11,921
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
66
ISBNs
79
Languages
12
Favorited
13

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