Member Reviews

This was one of the more Greek novels I've ever read. There's a sort of darkness to Greek society that is not often translated into non Greek language and this was the Greece that I knew when I left there during the economic freefall and the beginning of the crisis so it all felt very plausible and very real. It's a darkness that harkens back to a certified identity crisis and the writing here also kind of references that. There's a lot of reference to the mythology but also there's a lot of that bitterness of having been a conquered country that is very far from its sunny tourist destination image. This was a great book to sort of realize in that. Disclaimer I also believe that Greeks are very lovely people and this darkness that you can explore in this book is only one facet Greek society

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As an exploration of the Greek economic collapse this makes for some pretty grim reading. Set on an unnamed imaginary island in the Aegean, a microcosm of the whole of devastated Greece, four intertwined short stories portray the lives of migrants and locals struggling to survive poverty, corruption and despair. Draconian austerity measures have forced many Athenians to migrate to the island where they are resented by the locals and seen as invaders. The Athenians see the locals as “rats” who maintain the status quo with cartels and organized crime. There’s none of the romance normally associated with idyllic Greek islands to be found here, as the “rats” trample on the dreams and aspirations of the newcomers, often by violent means. After the EU bailout, severe austerity measures were imposed and the human cost of that is exemplified here. The displaced Athenians have been forced by unemployment to flee to the island but are shown no sympathy. It’s a bleak world they have arrived in. The book goes straight to the heart of the Greek economic collapse, and there seems to be little hope – even though one or two of the stories do perhaps show a glimmer and possibly the title suggests that good might come from the sea, as it has at times during the country’s history. A depressing but powerful story of loss, desperation and frustration and a strong sense of just what it’s like to live in a country gripped by economic crisis.

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Hard-hitting and poignant, Good Will Come From the Sea is a collection of loosely linked stories set after the financial crash in Greece. There are some very relevant themes within this book for today's times. The text is powerful in the way it highlights the utter powerlessness of its characters, their despair and ultimately their resilience.

Poetic and haunting, Good Will Come From the Sea will linger a while after the final page.

Highly recommended.

With thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for the arc.

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Thank you, Net Galley and Archipelago Books. Ikonomou is a Greek Faulkner!

I will be thinking about these loosely intertwined long, short stories for some time to come. I was awestruck to the point of borrowing his other book, Something Will Happen, You'll See, from my library. Special shoutout to the American translator, Karen Emmerich, who captures American slang in this remarkable book. FIVE BIG STARS

Archipelago Books says: Good Will Come From the Sea is a dirge for the Greek economic crisis and the devastation it has wrought, a profound meditation on the nature of justice in an unjust world. ... a tender and defiant song of loss, a study of poverty's toll on the human soul.

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This is a mesmerizing collection of four long stories by the Greek writer Christos Ikonomou, lucidly translated by Karen Emmerich.

Each of the stories is set on a small Greek island not far from Athens-- a setting which might be a subtle nod to the island of Arcadia used as a backdrop for heroic stories as far back as Virgil. Ikonomou transforms the island into a ruthless and unforgiving place where Athenians fleeing the economic and political crisis in the capital self-exile themselves among the locals, dubbed the Rats. There's a deep undercurrent of division between the two types of Greek--the Athenians are referred to as Foreigners, despite the idea that everyone is a Greek.

Each of the stories follows a loose formula which ends in a confrontation between Foreigners and Rats. In the first story, "I'll Swallow Your Dreams," a group of Athenians retreats to the island caves to start anew, having no where else to go. A man named Tasos squares off with a Rat and after his public humiliation, flees into a cave where he is never recovered. The titular story "Good Will Come from the Sea" follows the same premise--a father seeks restlessly for the son he's lost--while the middle story "Kill the German" spins a whole story about the indecision of an invalid named Chronis whether to save a woman from rape, or worse. The final story "Kites in July," follows a young couple whose dreams of owning and running a restaurant are cut short when their property is burnt down by the island's natives.

Ikonomou's stories are about failure, about recognizing your impotence, admitting defeat, making a fresh start even when you have nothing to start with. He delivers his stories in chapters of long unbroken paragraphs constructed as rambling monologues, although they are heavily focused and filled with something like revelation. The narrator of the first story recalls a conversation with his son when he stumbles upon the idea that if you haven't felt like a coward, you won't ever be a man. Later on, hate is compared to the rat who eats your guts in the Chinese basket torture.

The writing is surprisingly funny and can turn on a dime. In the same story, the Foreigners are having a tense moment with the Rats when the narrator suddenly breaks in: have you ever seen fish blasted out of the water with dynamite?

Ikonomou's humor is lucid and fine and independent of mockery or irony. I find this refreshing, not only in that it makes the humor somehow cleaner, more rooted in human nature such as in "Kites in July" when, after losing everything, the characters reach a kind of humble acceptance but are not so enlightened that they don't blow off some steam towards the Rats. It also leaves open the possibility of hope, although hope here is not so much resistance to hopelessness as it is the act of recognizing the futility of your situation and having nothing else to turn to.

Would absolutely recommend to a friend.

Reviewed for Netgalley.

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Four loosely linked stories focused on a group of Greeks who have moved to an island to work the land in the wake of the Greek economic crash, this is a heartfelt, bitter and deeply intellectual analysis of the betrayal of the people of a nation - by the unscrupulous, the selfish and the greedy. Idealism cannot win, it seems, but perhaps, only perhaps, there is some hope and it will come from the sea.

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I took easily to the first piece here, but then found the snappy and direct writing fell into the modernist, overly-long, multiple-clause sentence style, and things went a little too wayward. Before then there was a great directness, and a thumping approach to the politics felt on the island concerned that didn't turn the writing into diatribe, as it may well have done with lesser authors. Unfortunately, that seemed the end of the book's qualities, for the second effort was just waffling nonsense. The closing piece (if you ignore the framing sections that ended up meaning nothing to me) had some flashes of fine writing, with a couple naively thinking of opening a party venue amongst much local opposition, but also turned into waffle. Which leaves the darkness of the title piece, featuring an older man trudging the island at night on an important, personal quest. That too diverts too much into modernism, but shows that when the author is being less contrary he has a more than decent eye for situation. All in all, frustrating, and could have been better – but when it's good it really is most memorable.

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