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"An ingenious pocket universe." -Caitlin Horrocks, The New York Times Book Review "Gunnhild Øyehaug is a magician of the highest rank." -Catherine LaceyOn an ordinary day in Bergen, Norway, in the late 1990s, Anna is reading in the garden while her two-year-old daughter, Laura, plays on her tricycle. Then, in one startling moment, Anna misreads a word, an alternate universe opens up, and Laura disappears. Twenty years or so later, life has gone on as if nothing happened. In each of the women's lives, however, something is not quite right.
Both Anna and Laura continue to exist, but they are invisible to each other and forgotten in each other's worlds. Both are writers and amateur pianists. Both are married; Anna had two more children after Laura disappeared, and Laura is expecting a child of her own. They worry about their families, their jobs, the climate-and whether this reality is all there is.
In the exquisite, wistful, slyly profound
Present Tense Machine, Gunnhild Øyehaug delivers another dazzling renovation of what fiction can do, a testament to the fact that language shapes the world.
About the author
Gunnhild Øyehaug is an award-winning Norwegian poet, essayist, and fiction writer. Her story collection
Knots was published by FSG in 2017, followed in 2018 by
Wait, Blink, which was adapted into the acclaimed film
Women in Oversized Men's Shirts, and in 2022 by
Present Tense Machine. Øyehaug lives in Bergen, where she teaches creative writing.