Synopsis: The story of a New York neurologist and the three women who change his life: An overlooked pianist who finally receives fraught success after decades of disappointment; an elusive dancer whose untimely death her fiancé is desperate to untangle; a mysterious patient who is comatose after a violent accident. Magnus, a New York neurologist—son to one, lover to another, and doctor to a third—is the thread that binds these women’s stories together as he navigates relationships defined by compromise and misunderstanding, guilt and forgiveness, and, most of all, by an obsessive attempt to communicate—to understand and to be understood, to love and to be loved.
Tracking the Elusive Ólafur Jóhann Ólafsson
Photo by Annelisa Leinbach |
Compared to other authors we have read, there is very little to be found about the man himself on the internet. The biographical information is pretty much limited to his official bio everywhere you look:
Olaf Olafsson was born in Reykjavik, Iceland in 1962. He studied physics as a Wien Scholar at Brandeis University. He is the author of three previous novels, The Journey Home, Absolution and Walking Into the Night, and a story collection, Valentines. His books have been published to critical acclaim in more than twenty languages. He is the recipient of the O. Henry Award and the Icelandic Literary Award, was shortlisted for the Frank O’Connor Prize, and has twice been nominated for the IMPAC Award. He is the Executive Vice President of Time Warner and he lives in New York City with his wife and three children.
As I was putting this post together, I found an article in Bookpage where Olafsson talks about One Station Away and a little bit about his personal life. Among the interesting tidbits: His father, Olafur Sigurdsson, was an award-winning Icelandic author. You should probably click on the link and read the whole article as this is the longest discussion of the book by the author that I was able to find in any one article. I did find a slide show in the New York Times about his cozy little New York pied-à-terre.
It is easier to find information about his non-literary career. From the fount of all knowledge, I learned that Olafsson had worked for Sony, founding Sony Computer Entertainment at the time that the PlayStation was under development. He has worked on and off for Time Warner but left after the acquisition by AT&T. I was unable to find any in-depth reviews of One Station Away by any of the large periodicals. There are no interviews posted on YouTube either, so instead, I am posting a brief video of Vladimir Ashkenazy playing Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition." If you listen closely, it sounds just like Margaret Bergs.
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