The Windows of Brimnes: An American in Iceland | 
enlarge | Author: Bill Holm Publisher: Milkweed Editions Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy New: $9.74 You Save: $5.26 (35%)
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Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 286861
Media: Paperback Edition: First Trade Paper Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 1571313109 Dewey Decimal Number: 910 EAN: 9781571313102 ASIN: 1571313109
Publication Date: November 1, 2008 (New: Last 30 Days) Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Bill Holm is one of a kind. A Minnesotan of Icelandic ancestry, his travels have taken him all over the world, providing the material for a number of rich and memorable books. In The Windows of Brimnes, Holm travels to Brimnes, his fisherman’s cottage on the shore of a creek in northern Iceland. From there, he considers the fate of America — "my home, my citizenship, my burden" — in these provocative essays.
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A sense of place! April 18, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Bill Holm takes his readers with him as he settles down along the northern coast of Iceland in a cottage close to where his ancestors had lived before emigrating in the 19th century. For those new to Holm's writing, the book will reveal his sharp eye for detail, the breadth of his research, and his great heart as he shares a sense of going home to the land of his forebears. He is a brilliant essayist.
author quite unlikable February 15, 2008 0 out of 5 found this review helpful
Books like this are often excellent armchair co-pilots as they transport us to a place of interest. It's almost a given that the writer will be someone we would like to have as a travel companion - to share their stories first hand, to raise a glass with, etc. This author is anything but.
I am fascinated by Iceland - it is a wonderful country. It was with eager anticipation that I started this book anxious to hear a different tale - that of an American in Iceland. After all, we do bring the "baggage" of home with us wherever we go. Instead, I found a book about an American, that wishes he was not in his words "burdened by America". His contempt for America, and his sneers at those who are not poets and musicians - after all the world in his view would be a much better place if we all embraced the arts and shunned commercial pursuits -made the writer an utterly unlikable fellow.
magical windows February 4, 2008 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
Some years back, Bill Holm, a writer and poet of Icelandic descent, decided to visit the island his ancestors had left behind when they immigrated to Minnesota. He not only found himself happy to be there, but has since become one of Iceland's part-time residents, having bought a small house named Brimnes in a village, Hofsos, along one of the country's northern fjords. Mainly he and his wife are there for the summer but sometimes they manage winter visits as well, when Iceland's "spareness is magnified by snow and darkness." It's a simple life. Their Icelandic-made stove is older they are but does all a stove needs to do, with the not insignificant advantage that the fish cooked on it were swimming in local waters just an hour or two before arriving in the Holm's kitchen.
Holm writes: "When Americans ask me to describe my little house, I tell then, not entirely disingenuously, that it a series of magical windows with a few simple boards to hold them up, to protect your head from rain while you stare out at the sea."
As a boy growing up on the prairie, about as far from an ocean as it is possible to be, he read books of adventures at sea -- Moby Dick, Two Years Before the Mast, etc. -- and dreamt one day of finding his way to the world where land gave way to endless water with its tides and rollers utterly indifferent to all headlines, ambitions, ideologies and advertisements. In Iceland he found what he had been looking for.
Returning to the theme of windows, he writes:
"We do not see reality -- or nature -- directly," he writes, "but always through a window of some sort. These windows are often physical, the window of our `place,' our experience, our particular angle onto nature. But they can also be mental, the window of our prejudices, ignorance, ancestors, income, the boundaries we erect around the imagination. The events of our lives, both private and public, spiritual and political, enter consciousness through these dirty, smudged, undersized windows. St. Paul says we see only `though a glass darkly.' Maybe the sea, so big, so deep, so beyond our power to order, so completely without opinions about what it swallows or what gifts it gives, can provide us with clearer views of our own lives, our country, our connection to others and to history. If, in addition, the sea is flooded with unending light for three months [every summer], we might more clearly apprehend whatever wisdom arrived through those windows."
Reading The Windows of Brimnes, I often thought of Henry David Thoreau and his journal of living in a cabin on the edge of Walden Pond. If Thoreau had been born in 1943 instead of 1817 and made his way to a small Icelandic house gazing out over the cold water of a fjord, his writing would be hard to tell apart from that of Bill Holm: a luminously written report of what he has been looking at and listening to with unhurried, undivided attention, mixed with the occasional ruminations regarding the not-so-far-away mad world he has fled from.
Holm's book serves as an invitation to the reader to a find a place where, even if the windows one sees through have not become cleansed of every impurity, nonetheless give us a truer view of the actual world that we normally see with dimmed eyes though unwashed panes.
For a book like this to work, it cannot be general. It has to be rooted in a specific place. For Thoreau it was Walden Pond. For Bill Holm, it is the remote microcosm of Iceland, home to far more birds than people. He makes Iceland come to life as has no other book or essay about Iceland I've read in the past. It will be a strange reader who doesn't long to find a way to get there, if only for a visit. At the same time, the book is less an invitation to visit Iceland than a summons to step off the highways we find ourselves captives of and to live a more contemplative life.
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