Brightly shining A novel

Ingvild H. Rishøi

Book - 2024

"Beautifully told with humor and tenderness, a Norwegian Christmas tale of sisterhood, financial hardship, and far-off dreams, acclaimed by reviewers and beloved by readers across Europe, where it has been a bestseller. Christmas is just around the corner, and Ronja and Melissa's dreamer of a father is out of work again. When ten-year-old Ronja hears about a job selling Christmas trees near where the family lives in central Oslo, she thinks it might be the stroke of luck they all need. Soon, the fridge fills with food, and their father returns home with money in his pocket and a smile on his face. But the local pub has an irresistible pull on Ronja and Melissa's father, and before long he disappears into the night under the p...retense of buying Christmas gifts. Melissa decides to take his place at the Christmas tree stand, working before and after school, and brings along her sister Ronja, who charms the middle-class customers with her simple sweetness. On rare breaks in the dark of Norwegian December they dream of a brighter place of kindness and plenty, but both girls understand that their family structure is a precarious one. Skillfully told, evoking the delight, misunderstandings, and innocence of a child's voice, Brightly Shining is small in stature but with an outsize impact on the reader, and has all the markings of a magical modern classic"--

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FICTION/Rishoi Ingvild
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Rishoi Ingvild (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 18, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
Christmas fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Grove Press 2024.
Language
English
Norwegian
Main Author
Ingvild H. Rishøi (author)
Other Authors
Caroline Waight (translator)
Edition
First Grove Atlantic hardcover edition
Physical Description
182 pages ; 19 cm
ISBN
9780802163493
9781804710739
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ten-year-old Ronja's school caretaker hands her a flyer to give to her out-of-work father. A Christmas tree stand in Oslo is seeking workers. Ronja's father lands the job, and for a little while, things look up for their little family--Ronja, her dad, and her 16-year-old sister, Melissa. But when one of his drinking buddies comes around, their father's back to spending his earnings on alcohol. Melissa begs to take over his shift, fitting it in before and after school, and soon Ronja finds solace among the pines. Told with the clear-eyed candor of young Ronja, this beautifully crafted novel explores the challenges of a child's unpredictable life with an alcoholic father and the band of kind people who try to help, including an older neighbor and the tree-stand worker about to become a father himself. This moving tale, with not a single wasted word, asks how we keep going when hope fades and life's burdens become too much to bear, leaning on the power of imagination and connection to find a way forward.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Rishøi (Winter Stories) offers a charming, Christmas-themed novella about sisterhood and financial hardship in contemporary Oslo. Sisters Melissa and Ronja, 16 and 10, live with their single father, an alcoholic who can't hold down a job. When his frequent trips to the bar cost him his new gig at a Christmas tree stand, Melissa takes his place. Her boss, the miserly Eriksen, pays her less than her father, forcing Melissa to work long hours just to keep food on the table. Ronja, who narrates, frequently visits Melissa at work, and helps boost sales of Christmas wreaths by telling customers the proceeds will go to "children in need" (that is, her and her sister). Eriksen discovers the sisters' plan during one of his infrequent visits to the stand, and bans Ronja, threatening Melissa's job, as well. The sisters' plight takes a perilous turn as Christmas approaches along with a heavy storm, and they dream of living in a warm forest cabin instead of their harsh corner of Oslo. Rishøi's choice to tell the story from the 10-year-old's point of view proves fruitful, as Ronja conveys genuine hope amid the family's dire circumstances along with hints of wisdom beyond her years. This has the feel of a classic holiday tale. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Christmas story about a 10-year-old Norwegian girl who believes in miracles, and her 16-year-old sister. "Hello, two motherless children and an alcoholic here, can you please give us two more weeks?" This is the phone call that Melissa resorted to just once, according to her little sister, Ronja. It's the full truth, which the sisters try to keep hidden--from the neighbors, from the schools, and even from themselves. The story focuses on one Christmas season when, ever so briefly, their father dries out and gets a job as a Christmas tree seller before once again falling apart. As he disappears into bars, Melissa takes over his job, doing the work before and after school, but for less pay. Soon, her coworker Tommy brings Ronja in to convince customers to buy decorative wreaths so he and the girls can split the commission. She hawks them, saying that "all proceeds go to children in need!"--that is, she and her sister and Tommy's soon-to-be-born child. But Ronja is too young to be working at the tree market, so her efforts must be kept secret from the owner. Though the sisters love their father, he's unable to care for them and regularly put food in the fridge, so they're desperate. But as much as they hope no one sees their situation, everyone does--and just a scant few try to help: There's Aronsen, the across-the-hallway neighbor who feeds Ronja a few meals and irons her Christmas costume. The caretaker at school who shares his lunch with Ronja every day. Ronja's friend Musse and his dad, who find her wandering in the cold and try to get her sister to take her to the emergency room. Ronja is convinced that when things are at their worst, a miracle can happen, because sometimes they just do. But then again, sometimes they don't. A heart-wrenching tale of children trying their utmost to take care of each other. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.