I really enjoyed the first 2/3s of the book. Reading about how such a tiny country survived 2 world wars squeezed between the beasts of the UK, Germany and Russia was very interesting. A lot of thoughts about how you sometimes have to compromise on your morals to protect them/what you've built as a country, but also how compromising can be corrosive and can destroy the thing you're trying to protect. Also interesting to read a bit about the history of Greenland and how it relates to the US/Cold War/Russia, especially with trump's chatter about it lately.
The last third was a bit hard to get through for me. Maybe just ADHD kicking in or because the politics it discussed were a lot more detailed and talk-y rather than act-y. Still very interesting to see how the big political concerns of today developed though, it feels like the mirror to Sweden was very clear. Going from being a country who you on the surface might think would be very accepting to refugees, seeing as it historically has been so socialist and progressive, to the privileges of having a strong welfare society instead leading to a fear of "others" coming in and mooching off of it. And that fear being used as fuel by the right-wingers to push for the deterioration of the welfare state, but sometimes subtly! Because people still very much value it and feel it is a part of the national identity.
Good book!