Alastalon salissa

Alastalon salissa (In the Alastalo Parlor) (1933) is a landmark Finnish novel by Volter Kilpi. The two-volume, 800+-page story covers a period of only six hours, written partly in a stream-of-consciousness style similar to James Joyce's Ulysses--though some Finnish critics have argued that the stream-of-consciousness passages are neither as radical nor as extensive as Joyce's, and actually Kilpi's novel is closer in style and spirit to Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time.

Alastalon salissa

Alastalon salissa (In the Alastalo Parlor) (1933) is a landmark Finnish novel by Volter Kilpi. The two-volume, 800+-page story covers a period of only six hours, written partly in a stream-of-consciousness style similar to James Joyce's Ulysses--though some Finnish critics have argued that the stream-of-consciousness passages are neither as radical nor as extensive as Joyce's, and actually Kilpi's novel is closer in style and spirit to Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time.