Beatrice
I was caught off-guard by the cyberpunk vibe of this. One thing that felt really ambiguous to me is
when exactly it's set. The haziness of of time seems to be part of the liminality that defines these short stories.
To be honest, I didn't love this one. The characters seemed subordinated to the idea. I think the best part of the story was the gusto with which the authors describes this machine-organic coupling, how the hybrid baby is cared for and fed. But ultimately, the story didn't leave me with much to reflect on.
@OldschoolJohto The main character felt so flat to be I really find it hard to speculate on what he does afterwards. The way his story begins only when he encounters Beatrice and ends when Beatrice 2 leaves makes me feel like the character only exists in the context of his projected relationship. It would be nice to come back to this story to contrast it with "Herr Cederberg," which has a similar set-up, but felt a lot richer to me.
Some Letters for Ove Linström
One thing I really enjoyed about this one was the slow slip from mundane into fantastical. The atmosphere is build up really well into something close and claustrophobic.
I feel like this story begins a theme of commenting on governmental reach into citizen's lives. I'm curious if anyone else felt that there was an implicit critique of the Swedish welfare state. I know nothing about Swedish politics, but in this story (and later ones) the fairy realm seemed set in opposition to a human realm increasingly controlled by bureaucracy and regulation.
The fae mother/ancestor is clearly a big theme for the writer, that carries over into the other stories. I would love to come back to this story when everyone has read "Reindeer Mountain" and "Augusta Prime," both of which seem in conversation with this story (I accidentally read the whole thing on the plane, so oops.)
Miss Nyberg and I
This was thoroughly charming. What I love most is that through the story of this strange plant-creature, we're given this window into the touching and intimate friendship of the narrator and Miss Nyberg. It's a story about growing older, about caring. Again, the atmosphere is built carefully and masterfully here, but this time it's homey and comforting, rather than alien and disquieting. I was especially struck by the main character's reluctance to imagine a fictional future for their friend--there's something so respectful and considerate in that. Even though it wouldn't change a single thing in the real world, the narrator affords that respect and freedom to live her life how she wants to her friend. It's just such a lovely story. I'm not sure I'm articulating everything I liked about it fully.