Memory of Ocean

By Petra Rautiainen

A masterful account of Norwegian Lapland in the 1980s, its Kven minority and their integration into the society, the inheritance of trauma, oil drilling and the early stages of marine protection.

Northern Norway in the 1980s: Aapa, a woman of Kven origin, returns to northern Norway to explore the Arctic oil reserves after a decade of absence.

In the meantime, Norway has been enriched with oil, and nothing is as it used to be. Aapa faces the trauma of the past in her hometown, and little by little it becomes apparent that things are not exactly the way Aapa lets the reader understand. She proves to be an unreliable narrator who intentionally twists the past. But what has really happened to her late mother?

A travel diary takes the reader aboard an Ice- breaker in quest of oil in the Artic Ocean where the sun never rises.

In a second plotline, an unknow narrator examines the changes caused by global warming in the Artic Ocean for a documentary and reveals that the biggest players of the oil industry were already in 1959 aware of their dangerous impact on nature and climate change. Instead of acting, the industry opted for a strong counter narrative.

Like Land of Snow and Ashes, Memory of Ocean reads like a thriller and only at its very last pages reveals a baffling twist which overthrows all previous assumptions.

Publishing information

Year of publication

2022

Page count

300

Original title

Meren muisti

Original language

Finnish

Original publisher

Otava Publishing

Rights sold

  • Dutch
  • Italian
  • Danish
  • Norwegian
  • French
  • Swedish

About the author

Author photo of Petra Rautiainen for Rights and Brands Literary Rights.

Petra Rautiainen was born in 1988 in a small town in Eastern Finland. She has a Master’s degree in History and Cultural Studies, and is currently working on her doctoral thesis on representations of the Sámi people in the Finnish media. She has travelled around the world, studied in the UK and worked in Canada, New Zealand and Scotland. In Finland, she has also worked as a journalist and studied creative writing.Since childhood, Petra has been inspired by the barren nature of the Arctic areas. Hiking is her passion – she has hiked considerably in Lapland, but also in Iceland, Scotland and on the Faroe Islands. So far, she has preferred to take her hikes alone, but in the future, she’ll be accompanied by her new poodle puppy Ruska (the name translates to ‘autumn foliage’).Petra is interested in matters of equality, in minorities and their culture, as well as in historic representations of difference that still influence our norms and ideas today.“For me, writing is a way to try to understand the world, as well as a way to construct a world. Writing creates communication simultaneously on many different levels: a small detail can be just that to one reader, but to others it can create a possibility for a new deep connection and understanding.”– Petra Rautiainen

Author page

Reviews

"This poignant book makes you tearful and angry. But above all, it raises questions about the exploitation of the sea in a world affected by climate change... Petra Rautiainen shows that changes are possible. A powerful reading experience!’ Rating 5 out of 5 = Brilliant"

– Bibliotekstjänst

"A celebration of the Great North and its people, this beautiful, sensitive novel is also a cry of alarm. 'Memory of Ocean' invites us to review, at all latitudes, the scale of our collective priorities."

Le Monde

"Petra Rautiainen is an excellent writer who astonishingly combines a beautifully thought-out text and even an exquisite dreaminess with hard realism. So evidently, you can do this too!"

Kulttuuri kukoistaa Blog

“Memory of Ocean is a concisely-structured novel ... yet the book manages to address several issues. … The perspectives in the book feel new and refreshing. It finely weaves together the whole vulnerable northern ecosystem with its humans and animals. The ocean remembers and eventually so does the human. … This is a beautiful book – both as an object and a narrative. Petra Rautiainen, through her second book, reasserts her position as a fascinating author who addresses historical subjects by offering new perspectives.”

Kirjavinkit

”Rautiainen intertwines the environment consequences with a tragic individual story that has more power to appeal feelings than a rough factual text.”

Suomen Kuvalehti

"Petra Rautiainen’s Memory of Ocean is an important novel: it is starling and effective, it makes the reader ponder on the actions of humans, our history, and our entire relationship to our creation. It is the story of a small person, Aapa, but at the same time it is a story about so much more."

Savon Sanomat - Johanna Suominen

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