Reviews about Anne Marie Ejrnæs
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On
The Women's Night
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The Women's Night is a novel to devote oneself to, because one becomes such an elementary thing as wiser from it in the only real way there is to become wiser: unpredictably, surprisingly and in a constant rejection of prejudices.
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Carsten Jensen, Det Fri Aktuelt, 31.03.1988
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On
Thomas of Ribe
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‘Anne Marie Ejrnæes has a divinely blessed style The book’s very first section is an exaltation of language and she looks in the detail for what makes the text breathe. The novel about Thomas from mediaeval Ribe may therefore legitimately be read solely for the sake of its beauty.’
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Camilla Christensen, Morgenposten Fyens Stifttidende, 27.9.1996
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On
The Snail's Shell
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‘Read that woman! Her prose will frighten both animals and humans. It flows from her pen like gland secretions, eye juice, spittle, semen and milk, protoplasm. Let us call it secretion prose. The reader’s thoughts, mind and skin close with skin and hair around the book, while one notices the blood rolling under the most thick-skinned parts of the body. She gets through, establishes communication and contact.’
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Ulrik Gräs. Folkebladet Sydjylland, 5.7.1999
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