Delicately attuned to the complexities of both the natural world and
human psychology, this potent classic of twentieth-century Danish
literature is narrated by an isolated schoolteacher stuck in a mire of
loneliness, deception, and spiritual despair.
One of the greatest works of modern Scandinavian fiction, The Liar
tells the story of Johannes Lye, a teacher and parish clerk on tiny Sand
Island off the coast of Denmark, a place that in winter is entirely cut
off from the world at large by ice. It is winter when the book begins,
and for years now Johannes has lived alone, even as he nurses a secret
passion for Annemari, a former pupil. Annemari is engaged to a local
man, Olaf, who has left the island but is due to return come spring. She
is also being courted by a young engineer from the mainland. Such are
the chief players in a compact drama, recorded in Johannes's ironic,
self-lacerating, and anything but reliable diary.
Martin A. Hansen's novel beautifully evokes the stark landscape of Sand
Island and the immemorial circuit of the seasons as well as the
mysterious passage of time in the human heart, all the while proceeding
to a supremely suspenseful conclusion.