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A Bridge to the Stars
A Bridge to the Stars
A Bridge to the Stars
Ebook170 pages2 hours

A Bridge to the Stars

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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12 year old Joel lives with his father in the cold northern part of Sweden. At night he often sneaks out of his father's house to look for a lonely dog he has seen from his window. On the bridge across the icy river he starts a secret society and has adventures. But one night he discovers that his father's bed is also empty and will have to come terms with his father's new-found love. The harsh reality of Joel's world comes vividly to life and leaves the reader spellbound.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 15, 2009
ISBN9781849398114
A Bridge to the Stars
Author

Henning Mankell

Henning Mankell (Estocolmo, 1948-Göteborg, 2015) ha sido conocido en todo el mundo por su serie de novelas policiacas protagonizadas por el célebre inspector Kurt Wallander, traducidas a cuarenta y dos idiomas, aclamadas por el público, merecedoras de numerosos galardones y adaptadas al cine y la televisión. Tusquets Editores ha publicado la serie completa (compuesta por Asesinos sin rostro, Los perros de Riga, La leona blanca, El hombre sonriente, La falsa pista, La quinta mujer, Pisando los talones, Cortafuegos, Antes de que hiele —protagonizado por Linda Wallander—, Huesos en el jardín, El hombre inquieto y La pirámide) junto a otras doce obras, entre ellas el thriller titulado El chino y el relato autobiográfico Arenas movedizas.

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Rating: 3.443181847727273 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    For older children, but an entertaining "coming of age" novel
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Some very stirring scenes in this one. A young boy, unhappy because his mother has left him and his father, falls under the spell of a friend. Together the two flirt with evil . . . our hero drawn in by the spell the other boys casts on him. The climactic scene--our hero climbs a railway trestle because of a dare--is wonderful. Too much of the book is predictable. Unhappy boy meets eccentric adults (noseless woman, crazy man) who show him that life encompasses more than the ordinary and teach him lessons he'd never learn in school. Definitely uneven.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Exquisitely written, translated from Swedish. A boy whose mother abandoned him and his father, longs to know about his mother amidst his father's refusal to discuss it. On his own, he pursues a dog he saw out the window late at night, a dog on his way to a star. While seeking the dog, he learns about right and wrong, about adults and their world, and about being different. This opens up a new door to his relationship with his Dad. A beautiful story.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I love Henning Mankell's writing, and his ability to craft characters and situations that draw you into a story. This one's a bit different from many of the books of his that I've read, in that it is about a twelve year old boy in northern Sweden, and doesn't involve murder or detective-work. Instead, it is a examination of life and connections, father-son, friends, the past, and is a gently told story of Joel's life, as he comes to terms with some various aspects of his world. I noticed somewhere that this is listed as book #! in a series bearing Joel's name, so I expect there may be more coming. While I probably won't seek them out, I may read if they come my way. I will, however, continue to follow Mankell's writing as he leaves Wallander behind.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Not my kinda book. Not up to the excellent standards of Mankell's Kurt Wallender.....done with this series.

Book preview

A Bridge to the Stars - Henning Mankell

1

The dog.

That was what started it all.

If he hadn't seen that solitary dog, nothing might have happened. Nothing of what later became so important that it changed everything. Nothing of what was so exciting at first, but became so horrible.

It all started with the dog. The solitary dog he'd seen that night last winter when he'd suddenly woken up, got out of bed, tiptoed out to the window seat in the hall and sat down.

He had no idea why he'd woken up in the middle of the night.

Maybe he'd had a dream?

A nightmare that he couldn't recall when he woke up. Or maybe his dad had been snoring in the bedroom next to his own? His dad didn't often snore, but sometimes there might be an occasional one, a bit like a roar, and then it would be all quiet again.

Like a lion roaring in the winter's night.

But it was when he was sitting by the window in the hall that he saw the solitary dog.

The window had been covered in ice crystals, and he'd breathed onto the glass so that he could see out. The thermometer showed nearly thirty degrees below zero. And it was then, as he sat looking out of the window, that he'd caught sight of the dog. It ran out into the road, all on its own.

It stopped underneath the streetlamp, looked and sniffed in all directions, and set off running again. Then it vanished.

It was a familiar kind of dog, common in northern Sweden. A Norwegian elkhound. He'd managed to see that much. But why was it running around just there, all alone in the wintry night and the cold? Where was it heading for? And why? And why did it look and sniff in all directions?

He'd had the impression that the dog was frightened of something.

He'd started to feel cold, but he stayed in the window, waiting for the dog to come back. But nothing happened.

There was nothing out there, only the cold, empty winter's night. And stars glittering in the far distance.

He couldn't get that solitary dog out of his mind.

Lots of times that winter he'd woken up without knowing why. Every time, he got out of bed, tiptoed over the cold cork tiles and sat down on the window seat, waiting for the dog to come back.

Once he fell asleep on the window seat. He was still there at five in the morning when his dad got up to make coffee.

'What are you doing here?' his father asked after shaking him and waking him up.

His father was called Samuel, and he was a lumberjack. Early every morning he would go out into the forest to work. He chopped trees down for a big timber company with an unusual name. Marma Long Tubes.

He didn't know what to say when his dad found him asleep on the window seat. He couldn't very well say he'd been waiting for a dog. Dad might think he was telling lies, and Dad didn't like people who didn't tell the truth.

'I don't know,' he said. 'Maybe I was sleepwalking again?'

That was something he could claim. It wasn't absolutely true, but it wasn't a lie either.

He used to sleepwalk when he was little. Not that he remembered anything about it. It was something his dad had told him about. How he'd come walking out of his bedroom in his nightshirt, into the room where his father was listening to the radio or studying some of his old sea charts. Dad had taken him back to bed, but in the morning he couldn't explain why he'd been wandering around in his sleep.

That was ages ago. Five years ago. Nearly half of his life. He was eleven now.

'Go back to bed,' said his dad. 'You mustn't sit here and catch your death of cold.'

He snuggled back into bed and listened to his dad making coffee, preparing the sandwiches he would take into the forest with him, and eventually he heard the front door closing.

Then everything was quiet.

He checked the alarm clock by his bed, on a stool he'd been given as a present for his seventh birthday.

He hated that stool. It was his birthday present, but he'd really wanted a kite.

He felt angry every time he saw it.

How could anybody give a stool to somebody who wanted a kite?

He could sleep for two more hours before he'd have to get up and go to school. He pulled the blanket up to his chin, curled up and closed his eyes, and the first thing he saw was that dog running towards him. It was running silently through the winter's night, and perhaps it was on its way to a distant star?

But now he was sure that he was going to catch that dog. He would entice it into his dream. They could be friends there, and it wouldn't be as cold as it was outside in the wintry night.

He soon fell asleep, the lumberjack's son, whose name was Joel Gustafson.

It was in the winter of 1956 that he saw that solitary dog for the first time.

And that was the winter when it all happened.

All that stuff that started with the dog . . .

2

The house where Joel lived with his father, Samuel, was by the river.

The spring floods would come surging and thundering down from the distant mountains beyond the dark forests. The house was where the river curved round before continuing on its long journey to the sea.

But now it was winter, and the river was asleep under its white blanket of snow and ice. Ski tracks scratched stripes into the white snow.

Down by the river Joel had a secret.

Close by the stone buttresses supporting the big iron bridge where trains shuddered past several times a day was a big rock that had split into two.

Once upon a time the rock had been completely round. The crack had divided it into two halves, and Joel used to pretend that it was the earth. Whenever he crawled into the crack, where it smelt of damp moss, he would imagine being deep down inside the earth that he actually lived on.

A secret was being able to see what other people didn't see.

When he lay inside the crack, he used to think that he could change reality into whatever he liked.

Dancing around in the furious eddies and whirlpools caused by the spring floods were not logs, but dolphins.

The old uprooted tree that had stuck fast on the sandbank where Mr Under, the horse dealer, used to moor his rowing boat was a hippopotamus sticking its enormous head out of the water. And there were crocodiles under the surface of the water. Lying there, waiting to pounce on their prey.

Inside the crack in the rock Joel used to embark on his long journeys. In fact Joel had never been beyond the dark forests. He had never seen the sea. But that didn't matter. He would go there one of these days. When his dad had finally decided to stop working as a lumberjack. Then they'd go off travelling together.

In the meantime he could lie in the crack in the rock and go off on journeys of his own. He could imagine that the river was the strait between Mauritius and Réunion, the two islands off Madagascar. He knew what it was like there. His dad had explained how careful you had to be when sailing through that channel. There were dangerous sandbanks hidden just beneath the surface, and if your ship capsized it would sink four thousand metres to the bottom.

Joel's dad used to be a sailor. He knew what he was talking about.

When Joel saw dolphins and hippos in the river, it was his father's stories coming to life in his mind's eye. Sometimes he would take one or two of his father's sea charts down to the rock with him, to make it easier to transform the river into the other world.

Now that Joel was eleven years old, he knew that it was all make-believe. But it was important to take it seriously. If he didn't, he'd be betraying his own secret world.

In winter the enormous lump of rock would be covered in snow. He didn't go there so often then. Just occasionally he'd ski down the slope to the river, to make sure that the rock was still there. He'd establish a ski track round the rock, and think that it looked a bit like a fence. Nobody would be able to cross it and take possession of his rock.

It was in winter when they used to sit in the kitchen, Joel and his dad, and Joel would listen to all the stories.

In a glass case over the stove was a model ship. She was called Celestine, and his father had bought her from a poor Indian hawker in Mombasa. When his dad hung up his wet woollen socks to dry underneath her, the glass would mist over and Joel would imagine Celestine adrift in a thick cloud of fog, waiting for a wind to blow up.

He used to think something similar about the house they lived in. That it wasn't really a house but a ship that was riding at anchor by the river, waiting for a favourable wind. A wind that would blow them down to the sea. The rickety fence was in fact a ship's rail, and the attic flat they lived in was really the captain's cabin. The rusty old plough half buried in the abandoned potato patch was the ship's anchor.

One of these days the house they lived in would be set free. The anchor would be hauled aboard and then they would start gliding down the river, past the headland with the old dance pavilion. Just past the church they would be swallowed up by the endless forest . . .

'Tell me about the sea,' Joel used to beg.

Dad would switch on the radio and twiddle a knob until there was nothing to be heard but a murmuring sound.

'That's what the sea sounds like,' he would say. 'Close your eyes and imagine it. The sea that goes on and on for ever.'

They used to cuddle up on the kitchen bench when his dad felt like talking about all the remarkable things he'd experienced as a sailor. But sometimes he didn't feel like talking about it. Joel never knew when that would happen. Sometimes his dad came home from work with his nose frozen stiff and his socks wet through. But he was humming a tune and stamping his feet and snorting like a horse feeling pleased with itself as he shook off all the snow in the entrance hall, then sat down at the table and asked Joel to help him pull his boots off.

Joel would have boiled some potatoes when he got back from school, and if his dad was in the right mood he might well start talking about his adventures, once they'd finished eating and doing the washing up.

But sometimes there would be the sound of heavy steps on the stairs, a deep sigh as he pulled off his thick jacket; his face would be grim, his eyes averted.

Then Joel knew that he needed to be careful. Mustn't make a noise, mustn't ask about anything that he didn't need to know. Just set the table, serve up the potatoes, eat in silence the food his father prepared in the frying pan, then withdraw to his room at the earliest opportunity.

Two things were hard to cope with.

Not knowing why, and not being able to do anything about it.

Joel suspected that it must have something to do with his mother, and with the sea. The sea his father had abandoned, and the mother that had abandoned him. He'd often sat in the cleft in the rock and wondered about that. He always started by thinking about what was least difficult to face up to.

The sea.

If his father had been forced to abandon ship, how come that he was washed up in this little town in the north of Sweden where there wasn't even any sea? And how could he find any satisfaction in going into the forest every day to chop down trees when he'd never succeed in felling enough for him to be able to glimpse the open sea beyond?

How can you be washed up in a place where there isn't even any sea?

How can you drift ashore in the middle of a vast, dark forest?

What had really happened? Why did they have to live here, in the middle of this vast, dark forest, so far away from the sea?

Samuel, his father, was born in Bohuslän in the south-west of Sweden, he knew that. Right next to the sea, in a fisherman's cottage to the north of Marstrand. But why had Joel been born in Sundsvall, in the northeast of Sweden?

Mum, he thought. She's at the bottom of it all. The woman who didn't want to stay with them. The woman who one day packed a suitcase and took a train heading south when

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