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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
* NOW A NETFLIX FILM * AN NPR BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR *

A spellbinding Swedish novel that follows a young indigenous woman as she struggles to defend her family's reindeer herd and culture amidst xenophobia, climate change, and a devious hunter whose targeted kills are considered mere theft in the eyes of the law.

On a winter day north of the Arctic Circle, nine-year-old Elsa—daughter of Sámi reindeer herders—sees a man brutally kill her beloved reindeer calf and threaten her into silence. When her father takes her to report the crime, local police tell them that there is nothing they can do about these "stolen" animals. Killings like these are classified as theft in the reports that continue to pile up, uninvestigated. But reindeer are not just the Sámi's livelihood, they also hold spiritual significance; attacking a reindeer is an attack on the culture itself.

Ten years later, hatred and threats against the Sámi keep escalating, and more reindeer are tortured and killed in Elsa's community. Finally, she's had enough and decides to push back on the apathetic police force. The hunter comes after her this time, leading to a catastrophic final confrontation.

Based on real events, Ann-Helén Laestadius's award-winning novel Stolen is part coming-of-age story, part love song to a disappearing natural world, and part electrifying countdown to a dramatic resolution—a searing depiction of a forgotten part of Sweden.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 28, 2022
      In Laestadius’s nuanced English-language debut, the fragile peace of a Sámi tribal community in Arctic Lappland is shattered when a poacher begins to prey on their sacred reindeer herd. Nine-year-old Elsa witnesses a poaching in 2008, and after the police refuse to investigate, she keeps quiet about it in order to protect her family. Eventually, the Sámi begin to push back against escalating threats of violence from neighbors if they refuse to keep silent about the poaching, and amid the tension and danger Elsa loses an uncle to suicide and her brother becomes estranged from the family. At the heart of the tribe’s plight is that they regard the poaching as murder, while the unsympathetic authorities see it as simple theft. As Elsa grows up under the shadow of her peoples’ continued exploitation by the poachers, she dreams of revenge against them, but is unprepared for the fallout in 2018 after a poacher is found dead. Though the pace can be slack, the sense of place and character development make for an affecting portrait of the Sámi’s disenfranchisement. It’s a solid story of a family torn apart by cultural tensions.

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2022
      A traditional culture deals with threats from inside and outside its tightknit community. Kick-started by the disturbing poaching and slaughter of a reindeer that was part of a S�mi family's herd in remote northern Sweden, Laestadius' saga details the inequities faced by the contemporary Indigenous S�mi population. Elsa, a 9-year-old to whom the murdered reindeer had been entrusted, is threatened by the hunter and scared into not revealing his identity to her family or authorities. Previous reindeer slaughters had gone unpursued by local police since this sort of crime against the S�mi (and their way of life) was considered mere theft. Frustrated by the seeming passivity with which the group accepts the situation, Elsa sets upon her own path as she grows into adulthood: She questions traditional gender roles as well as the failure of local police to apprehend the hunter who is torturing and killing her community's reindeer. The legacies of long-held social prejudices against the Indigenous group--racism, economic insecurity, and the traumas borne by the community's elders who had been removed from the group in childhood and sent to "nomad schools"--continue to haunt S�mi life with devastating effects. Elsa must reconcile her own quest for justice with the need for some in the group to just survive. Looming over the tale, which unfolds over the course of more than a decade, is the specter of climate change and its impacts on the traditional S�mi herding methods. Laestadius, who is S�mi and of Tornedalian descent, indicates in her acknowledgements that the novel is based upon actual occurrences in S�pmi territory. Willson-Broyles' translation from Swedish is matter-of-fact and incorporates many phrases and words from the S�mi language. A revelatory account of not-well-known assaults on the rights of an Indigenous group.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2023
      In northern Sweden, the indigenous S�mi people have traditionally worked the land as reindeer herders. It's a way of life that raises the ire of many neighbors, one of whom launches a personal vendetta against nine-year-old Elsa and her family. Robert Isaksson often steals the family's reindeer to sell their meat on the black market, but he is just as apt to torture and slaughter reindeer to send a message that the S�mi culture is not welcome. Year after year, the family loses animals to his heinous attacks, filing hundreds of police reports that are blatantly ignored. In the face of such disdain, Elsa grows from a frightened child to a brave teenage activist, taking on the criminal justice system at great personal cost. Of S�mi descent herself, award-winning journalist Laestadius offers a rare, multigenerational look at the diverse and deep-rooted cultural heritage of this traditional arctic community. Akin to gritty stories of Old West cattle rustlers evading the law and society, Laestadius' unvarnished saga demonstrates the universality of oppression and revenge and conflicts over land and race.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2023

      DEBUT In this story of S�mi life, named Book of the Year in Sweden, Elsa, the nine-year-old daughter of S�mi reindeer herders, skis to the corral to see her favorite reindeer, only to find her dead. Still on the scene, the reindeer poacher, Robert Isaksson, threatens to kill Elsa and her family if she tells anyone. Divided into three parts covering the years 2008, 2018, and 2019, the novel describes the lives of Elsa and her community who live below the arctic circle in Sweden. Through adept characterization, the novel highlights the problems and issues the S�mi face--racism, loss of culture, alcoholism, suicide, governmental mistakes and neglect, and the devastating effects of climate change. As Elsa becomes a young woman, she begins to challenge the traditional gender roles of her community and the injustice of Swedish society by pushing back against the indifference of the police and their inability to stop poachers such as Isaksson. (While the S�mi view poaching as murder, the police categorize the crime as theft and do not actively pursue poachers.) Note that the chapter titles are written in S�mi. VERDICT While the novel could have benefited from tighter pacing, award-winning author/journalist Laestadius, who is herself of S�mi descent, succeeds in capturing S�mi life.--Jacqueline Snider

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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