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Summer
is the fourth and final volume of the Seasons quartet, a lexicon of short prose and diaries written by a father for his youngest daughter, with stunning artwork by Anselm Kiefer.
Your voice woke me up around eight this morning, it sounded unusually close, since, as I discovered upon opening my eyes, you were lying in our bed. You smiled at me and began talking. I made coffee and had a smoke in the office before I ate breakfast with you, and when your mother got up, I came in here to write a new piece.
In Summer, Karl Ove Knausgaard writes about long days full of sunlight, eating ice cream with his children, lawn sprinklers and ladybirds. He experiments with the beginnings of a novel and keeps a diary in which the small events of his family’s life are recorded. Against a canvas of memories, longings, and experiences of art and literature, he searches for the meaning of moments as they pass us by.
400 pages, Kindle Edition
First published August 31, 2016

As I lifted it up it squirmed slowly in my grasp, and when I placed it between the blades of the sharp scissors its tentacles moved. I pushed the handles of the scissors together, and as the blades sliced into its body I heard it screaming, low and shrill. (p. 47)
In our home no one works hard enough for their clothes to get either dirty or sweaty, and we have a washing machine, a dryer and a drying cabinet and enough money to buy new clothes every time a garment gets a hole or a tear in it or a button comes loose or a zip gets stuck [...]. (p. 333)
To kill a ladybird, however, is something few people do with a light heart. This is most likely because its appearance is pleasing to us. (p. 399)