My two word review of Swede Hollow: Oddly Compelling
This book tells a compelling story of immigrants from Sweden, embarking to the new world in 1897, landing and living originally in New York City, but ultimately settling in the St. Paul, Minnesota shantytown called Swede Hollow. It focuses primarily on a group of people who met on the ship bound for America: the Klar family (father Gustav, mother Anna, two daughters Ellen and Elizabeth and a son, Carl), a single woman Inga, and the widow Lundgren and her son David, voyaging to join her son Jonathon who emigrated earlier. Their story is one of poverty and hardship, but also grit and determination to have a better life for their family. The story plays out for them as for so many then and now - starting at the bottom rung of society, facing discrimination and hardship, not knowing the language, but working hard for a pittance so that their children could live the American Dream. The story of their life in the hollow in the late 1800's and early 1900's kept me turning pages and I must confess I had tears in my eyes at the end.
On the other hand, this was one of the most oddly written books I've read in a while. Larsmo included some accounts of people and incidents from his research that jerked this reader out of the story of the main characters, creating disorientation. These people and incidents were interesting in and of themselves, but felt plopped into the book so that all that was learned in the research could be included. Four times in the book, the story switched from third person to first person, another disorienting feature. One reviewer notes that Larsmo is a journalist in addition to a novelist and that this book has a documentary effect to it. In a way, this explains the writing style Larsmo uses to tell the story not just of this small group of people, but in the broader sense of Swede Hollow and of immigration to America at the turn of the 20th Century.
If you have an interest in any of this, I can recommend Swede Hollow. Another book about Swede Hollow was just published, Life in Swede Hollow, a Pictorial History. I'm on the hold list at the library for this one, full of photographs and memories from families who lived in Swede Hollow, which included Swedish, Irish, Italians and Mexicans in wave after wave of immigrants before the neighborhood was razed and burned in 1956. Can't wait to read that one and then trek over to Swede Hollow for a hike to see it with new eyes.
Why I'm reading this: This book caught my eye from a review in our local newspaper. Swede Hollow, a place in St. Paul, MN where many poor Swedish immigrants first settled, is now a beautiful park which I have explored.