The third volume--the book that made Knausgaard a phenomenon in the
United States--in the addictive New York Times bestselling series
A family of four--mother, father, and two boys--move to the south coast
of Norway, to a new house on a newly developed site. It is the early
1970s and the family's trajectory is upwardly mobile: the future seems
limitless. In painstaking, sometimes self-lacerating detail, Karl Ove
Knausgaard paints a world familiar to anyone who can recall the
intensity and novelty of childhood experience, one in which children and
adults lead parallel lives that never meet. Perhaps the most Proustian
in the series, My Struggle: Book 3 gives us Knausgaard's vivid,
technicolor recollections of childhood, his emerging self-understanding,
and the multilayered nature of time's passing, memory, and existence.