The I Index

Childhood / Youth / Dependency (The Copenhagen Trilogy, #1-3)

Top of the pile

93

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

91/100

Critics

94/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Tove Ditlevsen, Tiina Nunnally, Michael Favala Goldman

Publisher:

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Date:

January 26, 2021

This trilogy from Tove Ditlevsen, a pioneer in the field of genre-bending confessional writing, explores themes of family, sex, motherhood, abortion, addiction, and being an artist. This single-volume hardcover contains all three volumes of her memoirs

What The Reviewers Say

Lauren Oyler,
Harpers
What might seem in other writers a retroactive precocity is believable here. Ditlevsen is self-deprecating and effective at conveying the fish-eye view of a child in a claustrophobic environment; she understands that part of the memoirist’s job is to remember how life felt and synthesize it in a way she couldn’t have at the time.
Deborah Eisenberg,
The New York Review of Books
The Copenhagen Trilogy and The Faces are very different books, but they draw on the same material—Ditlevsen’s life—and both display a distinctive style; an uncanny vividness; a gift for conveying atmospheres and mental sensations and personalities with remarkable dispatch; the originality and deadpan, trapdoor humor of the significantly estranged; a startling frankness; and a terrible commotion of unresolved conflicts and torments. Both books also accelerate from zero to sixty before anyone has a chance to buckle up.
Hilton Als,
The New Yorker
Don’t think yourself odd if, after reading the Danish writer Tove Ditlevsen’s romantic, spiritually macabre, and ultimately devastating collection of memoirs, The Copenhagen Trilogy , you spend hours, if not days, in a reverie of alienation. It’s because the author, who died by her own hand in 1976, when she was fifty-eight, makes profound and exciting art out of estrangement.
Megan OGrady,
The New York Times
... beautiful and fearless.