Juha Hurme’s NUTTER sold to Onufri

The story of a nutter travels to Albania

Nutter (Hullu, 2012)

Nutter is a story about a man who’s mind decides to go for a walk one day. The man manages to take himself to a psychiatric ward to recover.

The outcome is a novel filled with dark humor, authenticity and insight. Compared to Ken Kesey’s legendary One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, it is a rare treat.

The Albanian rights have been sold to Onufri in Albania. The novel was recently published in German by Kommode Verlag.

Juha Hurme is one of Finland’s most loved and celebrated writers, known also for his innovative theatre. Hurme came to prominence in 2017 when he won the Finlandia Prize for his novel Headland.

Leino’s HEAVEN sold to Widnograg

Piia Leino’s EU Prize for Literature winning novel Heaven has been sold to Widnograg in Poland.

Heaven (2018)

Heaven is a dystopian thriller set in Helsinki of 2050s. In it, topical issues such as climate change, growing inequality, technological inventions’ power and nationalist movements form a page-turning read.

Heaven has gotten glowing reviews in Finland. In addition to the European Union Prize for Literature 2019 it won the Helsinki Metropolitan Library Helmet Literature Prize given to the future classic of Finnish literature.

You can read more about the novel here.

Mikko Rimminen nominated for the Finlandia Prize

If It Looks Like It, written by one of the most beloved Finnish authors Mikko Rimminen, has been nominated for the Finlandia Prize.

If It Looks Like It is a warm, tragicomic story about a lonely Mr. Lyy. The novel has been praised for its spectacular and unusual use of language, which, along the years, has become a trademark of Rimminen. The author manages to grasp true sadness behind the feelings of guilt and shame and turn it into a joyous and heartfelt experience. As the jury stated: 

The unusual way of narrating, the use of funny neologisms and adjectives as well as immersion in hilarious linguistic games is what makes this book exceptional.

The author himself said:

It was an unbelievably complex ride, given that the origins of this story, as well as my aim when I began writing it, were rather simple! Choosing the structure of narration seemed effortless, but – as to balance it out – Mr Lyy turned out to be the most complicated main character ever, and he soon became the subject of my nightmares. While usually my main problem used to be making fictional characters do anything at all, this time, Mr Lyy’s tendency to do everything that turns out to be against him caused me most worry and distress.”

Mikko Rimminen (b. 1975) is a lauded writer who started his literary career as a poet. He has written six novels: Park Life (2004), The Block (2007), Finlandia Prize-winning Red Nose Day (2010), Tag (2013) and The Most Natural Thing in the World (2017). Rimminen’s books have been translated into over ten languages . In 2011, the novel Park Life was turned into a successful movie.

Finlandia Prize is the most important literary award in Finland, given annually in three categories: the best novel, the best children’s or YA book and the best nonfiction book of the year. The award sum is 30,000 euros. 

Previously, several other HLA’s authors have received the award in the category of the best novel, including Mikko Rimminen himself (for the novel Red Nose Day, 2010): Kari Hotakainen (The Trench Road, 2002), Pirkko Saisio (The Red Letter of Farewell, 2003),  Ulla-Lena Lundberg (Ice, 2012), Riikka Pelo (Our Earthly Life, 2013), Jukka Viikilä (Watercolours from a Seaside City, 2016) and Juha Hurme (Headland, 2017).

A Dog Called Cat Meets a Cat nominated for Finlandia Junior Prize

A Dog Called Cat Meets a Cat (2019)

A Dog Called Cat Meets a Cat written by Tomi Kontio and illustrated by Elina Warsta, has been nominated for the Finlandia Junior Prize.

The beautifully illustrated book is a warm and wise story about friendship and overcoming one’s fears. In it, the underprivileged but loveable characters find their everyday joys embracing the world with open hearts. As the jury stated: 

The warmly narrated story, showing all flavours of life and its edges, offers deep reflection on the importance of finding your own path.” 

A Dog Called Cat Meets a Cat is a stand-alone book that continues the story of two friends, Cat and Weasel. They met for the first time in A Dog Called Cat (2015), which was shortlisted for the Nordic Council Children and Young People’s Literature Prize and nominated for the IBBY Honour List for Elina Warsta’s illustrations. 

The author Tomi Kontio says:
The heroes of this story are the outcasts of our world. When we encounter them in an underground train we want to change our seats; they are those whom we don’t want to see, whom we are perhaps even a little bit afraid of. I do not want to politicise this book; I only want to show, through a warm story, that we all equally long for security, trust and love.

The illustrator Elina Warsta says:
Cat, Weasel and Dog are multilayered, imperfect characters – just like us, humans. In our job, we can never forget that children read illustrations very carefully. I hope that in this book every child will find their own story. It is a story for a lifetime – meant for children as much as for adults.”

Tomi Kontio (b. 1966) is an established Finnish author. He has received numerous awards for his novels and poems, including the Finlandia Junior Award in 2000 for his novel Daddy Grew Wings in the Spring. Kontio’s poetry has been translated into many languages, including English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Polish, Swedish, Czech, Hungarian and Estonian. 

Elina Warsta (b. 1979) is an illustrator and graphic designer. Several of the book covers she has designed have won prizes in The Most Beautiful Book of the Year competition. Books she has illustrated have been published in France, Japan and Latvia.

Finlandia Prize is the most important literary award in Finland, given annually in three categories: the best novel, the best children’s or YA book and the best nonfiction book of the year. The award sum is 30,000 euros. 

Previously, two other HLA’s authors have received the award in children’s and YA category: Sanna Mander (The Lost Key, 2017), Vilja-Tuulia Huotarinen (Light, Light, Light, 2011) and Tomi Kontio (Daddy Grew Wings in the Spring, 2010).

Mrs C. nominated for the Botnia Prize

Minna Rytisalo’s novel Mrs C. has been nominated for the Botnia Prize. The nomination is Rytisalo’s second in the three-year-history of the competition: Rytisalo was awarded with the prize for her debut novel Lempi two years ago.

The jury’s statement of Mrs C. is as follows:

“Minna Rytisalo’s Mrs C. narrates the life of a young woman, little by little maturing with years and experiences, and its passions, desires, pains and sorrows. This life, put to pages, is the one of Minna Canth, one of the most significant Finnish authors. Mrs C. reshapes the solidified and dusty national icon, put on the pedestal by the literary establishment, to a woman in flesh and full blood, to an exciting and intriguing person with unfeigned and sincere thoughts. The reader starts to value the national author in a totally new manner as a person worth knowing. The fictional life story, created for the novel, does a favour to the reading public and to the public image of the author Minna Canth.”

Read more about Mrs C. here and about Minna Rytisalo here.

In addition to Mrs C, there are seven other books nominated for the prize. The head of the jury, professor Sanna Karkulehto, stated that “the toplist of the quality literature with international level seems to get longer each year”.

Botnia Prize is a literary award given to the best book of the year written by an author from North Ostrobothnia. It is one of the biggest Finnish literary awards (10,000 euros), and it recognizes no genre nor language limitations.