Covering much of the same ground as her last novel — the interrelation between money, sex, violence and gender, capital’s power to console or benumb —<i> The Devil Book</i> shares the same<b> bristling, didactic prose, but with a welcome barbed humour... a lacerating literary harnessing of rage at a decrepit system</b>, held together by Nordenhof’s <b>defiantly unique voice</b>

Financial Times

So beguiling… the book as a whole is...<b>an undeniable success: funny and angry, tender and timely</b>

Skinny

<b>Nordenhof has a sort of literary X factor,</b> cutting her story down to only the most interesting parts. As Scandinavian septologies go, <b>it’s more fun than Jon Fosse’s, more ballsy than Solvej Balle’s. </b>The final section…fumes with fury

Observer

Se alle

<b>[Readers] will fall in love with Nordenhof’s project</b> purely as text, as properly experimental writing whose moral and artistic purpose are so deeply entwined as to make them inextricable… There is another fire here: a passionate, magnetic commitment to writing as a political act. <b>I will continue to follow this series, wherever it goes</b>

Guardian

Nordenhof’s [book] is hot and eccentric… Like a normal novel with all the boring bits taken out, <b>these books are more energising and thrilling the more furious they get</b>

Guardian, *Books of the Year*

<b>Fizzes and soars</b>

- Mark Haddon,

So tender and pure that it is very difficult not to be moved

Kritik

Even better than the first

Politiken

'Nordenhof has a sort of literary X factor' OBSERVER
‘A comet in Scandinavian literature’ OLGA RAVN
'Fizzes and soars' MARK HADDON


*Guardian best translated fiction of 2025*

A classic girl-meets-boy-meets-devil story from a Danish literary superstar

A woman meets a man on a train in Copenhagen and agrees to visit him in London. She has lived many lives and as she sits out a two-week quarantine in his apartment, she begins to tell her story.

Years ago, desperate for money, she sold herself to a man called T. He offered her a suitcase full of money and lavish gifts in exchange for total control of her body. In the bed between them lay a large kitchen knife and the promise of an iconic death.

At the last moment, she chose life and fled. Now in London, the woman watches the people around her, searching for clues on how to live in the face of betrayal and loss, and what freedom really looks like.

Intimate, revelatory and ultimately revolutionary, this is a portrait of a woman driven to the brink of destruction, who learns to believe in love again.

'Like a normal novel with the boring bits taken out' Guardian

'Defiantly unique' Financial Times

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781787335189
Publisert
2025-09-04
Utgiver
Vintage Publishing
Vekt
212 gr
Høyde
206 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
128

Oversetter

Biografisk notat

Asta Olivia Nordenhof is an award-winning poet and author. Money to Burn, the first book in the Scandinavian Star septology, was first published in Denmark in 2020. It was awarded the PO Enquist Prize and the European Union Prize for Literature and was shortlisted for the Nordic Council Literature Prize. An international sensation and translated into eighteen languages, Money to Burn was published in English by Jonathan Cape. The Devil Book is the second in the series and was an instant bestseller upon first publication in Denmark. Caroline Waight is an award-winning literary translator working from Danish, German and Norwegian. Her translations include books by Caroline Albertine Minor, Ingvild Rishøi, Maren Uthaug and Dorthe Nors. She was a finalist for the 2023 PEN Translation Award and received a special commendation at the 2023 Warwick Prize for Women in Translation.