Download Good Will Come From the Sea Christos Ikonomou Karen Emmerich Books

By Jared Hunter on Wednesday 22 May 2019

Download Good Will Come From the Sea Christos Ikonomou Karen Emmerich Books





Product details

  • Paperback 250 pages
  • Publisher Archipelago (March 12, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1939810213




Good Will Come From the Sea Christos Ikonomou Karen Emmerich Books Reviews


  • I wish I wasn't the first reviewer for this, because I feel like other people can do the content of this collection more justice - but I can say it was a dark, but funny, character-driven collection that made me appreciate in a grim way what a tenuous world we live in right now.

    We see the US and our problems, and then these countries in the EU are dealing with corruption and shortage and bad economies far worse than we are - and yet people have to get up each morning and deal with it. Just like we have fiction here ("Ohio," by Stephen Markley, or "Cherry" by Nico Walker) that explore the semi-suburban rust-belt underclass, this book does the same from the European perspective.

    I can't say I enjoyed these stories, but they aren't that kind - they provide a look into another part of the world that I would not know anything about otherwise. Any fan of short fiction should at least appreciate them, and I think a good audience for this would be readers who want to think about stories and characters from other than the usual New Yorker type of subjects.
  • As in an Something Will Happen, You'll See, his earlier collection of linked stories, Ikonomou examines the effect of the world order on the citizens of Greece. The earlier collection focussed on cities and urban situations. But here, he proves that inhabitants of unheralded islands are not exempt. Because of its unspoiled as yet untouristed nature, the unnamed island has become a target for unscrupulous investors who don't care that those already in residence have been self sustaining for millenia. Despite the fact that the group of Athenians who have moved to the island to make a go of it, there are more ruthless forces who plan on making it impossible for them in this new place. In addition, farmers are going out of business by the importation of tomatoes and onions from elsewhere, and as one points out, "Sometimes I think, we lost our jobs, our homes, our lives – why can’t we lose our memory too? Why did they take everything else but leave us our memory . . . Becoming poor isn’t what breaks you. What breaks you is remembering you didn’t used to be poor." Much of the monologue is interior, but the overall tenor is bleak, shattering.