So far there are five volumes of Solvej Balle’s dilemma-ridden story, longlisted for the International Booker Prize 2025. I read the first one and questioned how she could squeeze another four volumes from this rather prosaic start.
I mean, OK, the premise is fascinating. That is the repeating day syndrome, but it would be hard to beat in a literary sense the success that Groundhog Day had in its most populist cinematic form. In Balle's story, Tara Selter wakes every day to repeat the day that has gone before. She is at liberty to do what she wants, but the next day never arrives. In truth, I found Balle took any sense of wonder from a magical idea. Her protagonist rambles through a rather tedious daily routine ad infinitum and has a passable go at sifting through the mechanics of the time anomaly. However, any consideration of why Chronos might be treating her this way is not addressed. Maybe one of the succeeding four novels examines this. Unfortunately, I was so bogged down in ennui that I don’t think I can be bothered.
It’s not that I dislike slow self-reflection, quite the contrary, but Balle repeats a lot of what she’s already written, and when she doesn’t, what she writes is simply a nuance of what she’s already written. Nothing is especially interesting; there’s no drama, observation outside her experience, or expectation of a future. I’m assuming that Balle’s will eventually force the protagonist to experience, through her ordeal, a catharsis, just as Bill Murray has to do in Groundhog Day, but of course that’s just speculation.
This first volume only establishes her predicament and her initial attempts to exit it, and to be honest, they’re not that adventurous. She finds many ways to test and analyze her predicament, unfortunately, all of them quite predictable. Surely, there must have been other, more interesting ways to break out of her imprisonment and deliver something that has depth and a little more profundity. OK, I may be prejudging the complete set of volumes, but it’s inexcusable that this first volume can’t stand on its own. I’ll agree that it was brave of her to take this on, since I imagine expectations would be high with a concept that’s been successfully delivered in the past, but I found On the Calculation of Volume I came up far too short.
I found the writing similar to last year’s Booker long-listed ’Study for Obedience’, by Sarah Bernstein, and also Amina Cain’s ‘Indelicacy’. In all three, the female protagonist is trapped in an emotional straightjacket. That said, it doesn’t have the psychological self-flagellating intensity of the former or the curious off-putting directness of the latter. It is quite flat and written with unexceptional prose.
It's beyond me to read more of this saga, but I'll take note of what others say, with interest.