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Wendy Swallow
Author
Searching for Nora: After the Doll's House

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

Searching for Nora answers the question that audiences of Henrik Ibsen's play A Doll's House have asked for decades: What happens to Nora Helmer, Ibsen's protagonist, after she walks out on her husband and young children at the end of Ibsen's play? Guided by the realities of Nora's time and close study of Ibsen's celebrated character, author Wendy Swallow sends Nora on a journey that takes the outcast down the social ladder in Norway and sweeps her, in disguise, onto an emigrant ship for America, where she settles on the harsh Minnesota prairie. A second story line, centered on a young university student in Norway in 2018, weaves through the book and combines, with Nora’s, to tell a powerful tale of redemption.
Reviews
Beth Brophy, author of My Ex-Best Friend and Reunion

“For those who wondered what happened to Ibsen’s Nora Helmer after she slams the door on her marriage, comes this compelling and engaging novel. A fascinating social history of turn-of-the-century women in Norway and the American Midwest. Beautifully written, with characters that resonate long after you turn the last page.”

Joanne Lipman, author of That’s What She Said: What Men Need to Know (and Wome

“So much more than a sequel, Searching for Nora is a masterful tale that spans generations, continents, and the intertwined lives of two remarkable women. Lyrically told and meticulously researched, this unforgettable saga transports you from the fjords of Norway to the wide open plains of the American west. I couldn’t put it down.”

Rick Davis, dean of the College of Visual and Performing Arts and Professor of T

“Few narratives in Western literature have inspired more “what happened next?” speculations than Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, with its famous “door slam heard ’round the world.” Nora’s risky (and theatrically unprecedented) act of self-emancipation challenged paradigms of both dramatic and social structure, leaving us to wonder, with a deliberate absence of guidance or foreshadowing, about the next “act” in the play of her life. Wendy Swallow has done the hard work of imagining in four dimensions – across time and space, from Norway to America, and into the first quarter of the 20th century – how the echoes of that door slam might reverberate in the lives of several families, and in the intellectual and social currents of two continents. Her book is steeped in the Ibsen tradition of meticulous observation, careful design, and rich implication. Part family drama, part evocation of early feminism (both also notable Ibsen specialties), the work takes us on a satisfying and altogether believable journey of discovery as Nora’s story comes full circle across the generations.”

Steve Piacente, author of Bella, Bootlicker, Pretender, and Your New Fighting St

“Exquisitely crafted and brilliantly delivered. Wendy Swallow has brought us a passionate and cautionary tell that speaks to the life choices we all make – and how those decisions ripple through the generations, affecting us and those closest to us, in ways we never could have imagined. Searching for Nora forces two important questions – are the lives we’re living in alignment with our core values, and if not, what are we willing to do about it?”

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