JAL's page on Ordfront's old website
JAL himself about his debut in the magazine Svensk bokhandel (2004-10-25)
Örjan Abrahamsson, Kristianstadsbladet (2004-06-07):THE OTHER
My book is about a vampire in the Stockholm suburb of Blackeberg in the 1980s. It's also about being twelve years old. About love, too. And revenge. But a vampire is at the center of the plot. A real one, the kind that has to drink blood to stay alive.
The title alludes to what I think is the most morally fascinating thing about vampires: you have to invite them in order for them to get you. It's also the title of a song by Morrissey, "Let the Right One Slip In". An order: LET THIS HAPPEN!
There is almost no horror written in Swedish. Why not? No idea. The fear of the locked, dark room where something's crawling around in the corner is universal. But up until now, that room has been located in the US or England. Let's change that now.
My stories don't revel in blood and ickiness. Those things are there, of course, but above all they're about people who find themselves facing the Other. Our reality is frail and brittle, isn't it? We walk around in nice weather, do our homework and plan what kind of lumber we're going to use for the new porch. And at the same time... at the same time... there's only a thin membrane separating us from the downfall, the monsters, a blinding darkness. The Other. What happens when it seeps in? What do we do?
You might not feel this way, no. For you it's all about impregnated lumber, end of story.
I've felt this way since I was twelve, more or less. That's when I started reading horror. I had basically all of the books in the Kalla kårar series, if you remember? Those were finally books that were about how things really are. A kind of homecoming. Unlike the Pip-Larssons [children's book series] or Enid Blyton's character constellations - five, six, seven, or however many they were. Kalla kårar was reality. That's where I could recognize myself.
I was an outcast, of course. I did magic. Cards, coins, napkins. My second homecoming was when I got into Swedish Magic Circle as a thirteen-year-old. Everybody there was a freak. Bullied boys with a secret. Old men who drank whisky and showed card tricks to each other with trembling hands. I can weep with tenderness when I think of it. My family.
Oh, I feel better now. I was a standup comedian for twelve years. I'm married and love a lot, have a son. But when I started writing Let the Right One In, it was like finding my way back to something I'd forgotten. The basis of what I am - the horror and the magic. I couldn't understand how I'd managed to ignore it for so long.
So now here it is. The first Swedish vampire novel since Viktor Rydberg's Vampyren, to my knowledge. You don't need to feel the way I do. You can simply read it as a thriller. That's how it's written. But if you sense the presence of that membrane, the paper wall separating us from the unmentionable: read and relish. And welcome to the family.
This one's titular assessment of the book was included as a blurb on the cover of several of the Swedish editions. Also, I have to include this suave-looking picture of how JAL looked at the time.
Eva Johansson, Svenska Dagbladet (2004-08-30)A revelation in Swedish literature
The same autumn that a Soviet submarine runs aground in the Blekinge archipelago and the eyes of the world for once turn to the little country at the world's end, an odd couple discreetly move into a modest apartment in Blackeberg, one of Stockholm's gray and shabby concrete suburbs.
The reclusive couple, an older man and a young girl, arrive at night and seem to sleep during the day. Only after the fall of night one evening in the courtyard does the neighboring boy Oscar[sic] get to know the secretive girl and an unusual friendship begins.
This is not the opening of yet another mopey, autobiographical report of growing up in the depressing Swedish suburb. No, John Ajvide Lindqvist's debut novel Let the Right One In is something as refreshing as a genuine horror novel, set square in the middle of the retired Swedish folkhem.
Without revealing too much, it's safe to say that there are different kinds of bloodsuckers in Blackeberg in 1981 AD. Twelve-year-old Oscar[sic], the main character of the book, is a typical bullying victim, that is to say an arbitrarily chosen target who suffers daily humiliation at the hands of a group of coevals. Oscar dreams of the impossible: redress, yes, revenge.
In parallel with this pennalist drama, a police investigation is taking place. A boy has been murdered in Vällingby, but incredibly enough only after the body has been drained of blood. Rumors of ritual murder spread. But no one can really believe that a bestial murderer is running loose in the Blackeberg area.
Luckily, the police investigation is kept at an appropriate distance in Let the Right One In. Swedish crime novels a dime a dozen these days and John Ajvide Lindqvist is out on a different errand.
Instead the story focuses on Oscar[sic], the mysterious girl next door, Blackeberg's semi-criminal, glue-sniffing teenagers and the gang of alcoholics who after as usual having getting started at home hang out at the time period's classic wino refuge, the obligatory Chinese restaurant. Naturally we also get to know the cruel killer.
Because yes, this is indeed a horror novel as the cover implies. But far from only. John Ajvide Lindqvist skillfully weaves together the story's different threads and paints a full-bodied portrait of the Sweden of the early '80s that reeks of the suburb.
You never doubt that the author knows what he's talking about, but not only because he himself has a background in Blackeberg. No, the debutant John Ajvide Lindqvist writes just as unabashedly as a veteran novelist. The depiction of locations and characters is sharp and vivid, the psychological insight is strong and convincing, and the story is pulled forward with a lovely sense for dialogue, nerve and drama.
The novel's premise is perhaps not entirely original. It's of course a fairly tried and tested literary device to let the supernatural move into the apartment next door and, so to speak, give the devil a mundane form. But the execution is quite original. Because gradually through the book's four hundred pages, I realize that Let the Right One In is a revelation in Swedish literature. It is a stylish, thrilling horror novel and a painfully gripping depiction of childhood with an acrid stench of Swedish suburbia.
It's perhaps far too early in the year to talk about the Swedish debutant of the year. So let's hold off on that.
Moreover, the question will instead rather be if Let the Right One In is the best Swedish novel of the year. That's how good it is.
Björn Hagström, Dagens bok (2004-09-14)Chilling horror story with vampires in the suburb
Vampires in the folkhem. Strange that no one's come up with that idea before. That no one's thought that horror could be an effective tool for literarily depicting modern Sweden. Because now that John Ajvide Lindqvist has both thought and written, it seems so obvious.
Let the Right One In takes a firm grip around a piece of the Swedish eighties. The location is Blackeberg. A suburb which in 1981 had existed for three decades, a brand-new and innocent society. No history, no real disasters and therefore no readiness for what will come to take place there during three dreary autumn weeks.
A place where darkness grows under the neatly ordered surface, in spite of all the careful social planning. Or as one of the novel's characters states:
These buildings, the paths you walk, the the places, the people, everything is just ... like a single big damn sickness, see? Something is wrong. They thought this place out, planned it all out so it should be ... perfect. And in some damn wrinkle it went wrong, instead. Some shit.
The novel's nave is twelve-year-old Oskar. A bullied and despised boy who seeks comfort in horror stories and violent revenge fantasies. Then a couple new neighbors move into the building next door, a middle-aged man and a strange tomboy named Eli.
The two children make contact, and Lindqvist tenderly paints a picture of the emerging young love between two outcasts. And at the same time as the neighborhood youths are sniffing glue in the basement and the headlines are screaming out news about a Russian submarine outside Karlskrona, the suburb is shook by a couple of bestial murders.
The reader soon realizes that Eli is a vampire and the man her human accomplice, a pedophile who ensures that his young loved one gets what she needs. But it takes time before Oskar realizes who and what his new friend really is. Other than him, only the alcoholics at the Chinese restaurant gradually realize what's really causing a stir in Blackeberg. But who would listen to them? Really, the distance is not so great between a cast-out alcoholic and a dreaded vampire. Both stand slightly to the side of society, the type of people you prefer to avoid or pretend don't exist.
Intimate childhood depiction, spot-on depiction of society and chilling horror story. All of it at once, in other words, and entirely without creating any friction between the novel's various layers and aspects. Lindqvist superbly balances the thrilling against the moving, the dirty realism against the fantastical. It's borderline perfect.
But just like almost everything else in the genre, Lindqvist's novel suffers from unambiguity in the pure horror scenes. They're luckily quite few, but in a couple of places there is so much blood and guts and drooling madness that the fear completely vanishes. The more you see of the frightening, the sillier it becomes. Hints and shadows are always much creepier, and that is true here as well.
There is something grandiose and melancholy to Lindqvist's vampires, to their tragic chosenness and loneliness. In this sense he's reminiscent of Anne Rice, the genre's modern master - as well in his way of weaving a queer perspective into the tale. And just like her, he lets us see the world through the vampires' own point of view as well.
But there is still a great distance between Rice's bombastically romantic universe and Lindqvist's Swedish suburb. If Rice is opera, Lindqvist is punk. Let the Right One In reshapes the vampire myth in a form of shabby-gray, social realism, and fills it with everyday boredom, grocery stores and schoolyard torments.
The designation "horror novel" may scare off some readers. Not because they want to avoid the frightening, but because horror is still viewed as a lower-status genre here, as a kind of cheaply thrill-seeking entertainment literature. After John Ajvide Lindqvist, that particular myth should find it difficult to persist.
I wasn't able to find a working archive copy of the following reviews, only blurbs from JAL's old website and the cover of the old paperback version, but I'm including them here anyway.Debutant with a bite
7/10
A newly-written vampire novel in Swedish. It almost sounds too good to be true. John Ajvide Lindqvist has in his debut novel tackled the so seemingly simple subject of vampires. How hard can it be? A couple hot girls with fangs, some old distinguished gentleman with the same and then a couple unsuspecting teenagers in a cabin in the woods or a café along an American freeway and then a shitload of blood. Easy peasy. But what if you don't want to tell that story again? One of the most interesting things you can do has to be what Lindqvist has done. Treat it as a real story. Horror novel as serious literature. If vampires existed, how would they manifest in society? Would vampires choose to live in Blackeberg?
The wonderful prologue sets the tone for the entire book and does it well. At this stage, you're not quite sure what road we're going to take and we don't get any real clues either. It heightens the tension and expectations but not to unreasonable levels. You start to suspect that Lindqvist is something special. Slightly moreso than you might've expected, even if it could still go racing off in the Anne Rice or Laurell K. Hamilton direction. There's nothing wrong with that direction but it's always more interesting when you manage to do something unexpected, something new.
Oskar lives with his mother and gets bullied pretty hard in school. He constantly exists on the edge. On the edge of criminality. On the edge of suicide. On the edge of being driven to murder. On the edge of addiction. On the edge of nothing. My thoughts go to Evil by Jan Guillou with the difference that Oskar doesn't have a choice. He can't hit back on any level. The most normal thing he has is the relationship to Mum but it feels almost like a dream. Something that's there in the background but doesn't affect real life. What can Mum really do in school?
This murder- and serial killer-obsessed boy meets the new neighbor girl Eli down at the playground late one evening when he's practicing stabbing his knife into trees who get to act as stand-ins for the bullies. She doesn't smell very good but she interests him somehow. If nothing else, she's a chance to start over, a new relation with someone who doesn't have any preconceived notions. He knows that there's something different about her. No one can solve a Rubik's Cube that quickly without cheating, and she doesn't feel cold when it's freezing outside either. Eli is as desperate in her own way and maybe together they become stronger?
Lindqvist has spent a lot of energy on the setting and giving the book the right feeling. He has succeeded very well and the feeling of being there is present at all times. No internet and no mobile phones you can call the emergency number on. Notknäckarna on TV and shrimp crépes was popular and Russian submarines get stranded in the archipelago. I myself remember how seriously people took the threat of nuclear war, it was a reality back then in a way that even I have difficulty picturing today. That's a feeling that's not really communicated in the book but that could on the other hand be a conscious move. Oscar[sic] has other things to worry about than nuclear war. More serious things.
As a contrast to the youths there is the gang of alcoholics, one of whom falls victim to the vampire and one of them saw the whole thing happen but who would believe what they're saying? These broken people drown their sorrows and try to find a way to get revenge or justice but what can you do? Not even the courage the alcohol gives is quite enough for them to dare.
Lindqvist shows extremely high class with this dark, somber, subtle and violent story and I look forward to the next release. Maybe a sequel in the modern day?
The only negative is that things sometimes move a bit slowly. Not to the point where it really becomes a chore but sometimes it still feels a bit sluggish. But how much does that matter when you, the rest of the time, get absorbed in one of the absolutely most exciting debuts this year? Not much. Not much at all.
I know what happens to a vampire who enters a house uninvited. Do you?
Jonas Thente, Dagens Nyheter
Crister Enander, Helsingborgs DagbladJohn Ajvide Lindqvist has with his debut thereby done the diversity of Swedish literature a great favor. Beyond that he has also written a very impressive novel that could very well measure up to some of the best international authors in the genre – the aforementioned Whitley Streiber and Poppy Z Brite are perhaps the ones that are the most similar. He is as familiar with the updated vampire mythology à la Anne Rice as he is in Swedish suburban life and a couple scenes in Let the Right One In are ones that a director like Stuart Gordon would kill to get to shoot. May John Ajvide Lindqvist continue on his path, so that perhaps going forward we can even the scales when it comes to horror novels.
Staffan Engstrand, Norrtelje TidningAbove all, the portrait of the bullied Oskar is very powerful, gripping and believable…. It is a sign of a great deal of literary courage by the author to give a go at writing a horror novel in Swedish. All the more impressive is the fact that John Ajvide Lindqvist has succeeded so well at his unusual endeavor. The strength of Let the Right One In is not only its creeping horror moods but first and foremost John Ajvide Lindqvist's well-developed ability to capture the atmosphere of the everyday and ordinary suburban life. And it is in contrast with the convincing realism that the horror depiction works. Let the Right One In is an unusually consummate debut.
Maria Küchen, AmeliaIt's a story about maturing, about growing as a person. And it's told with great precision. … It is in many ways a very good book, effectively written to boot. But it is at the same time very cruel and scary.
Henriette Zorn, Hufvudstadsbladet (Finland)I love it. Spent several sleepless nights with »Let the Right One In«. Could not stop reading. More like this in contemporary literature, please.
When it comes to reading, it is sometimes healthy to get one's ingrained preconceived notions turned on their head. Had it not been for a good friend whose judgment I trust, I would never even have considered opening a book with vampires as a theme. Even the blood-stained cover gave me misgivings. However, after the novel's prologue I was helplessly stuck, and once I had gotten some distance into the book I found myself prepared to accept the existence of vampires in the middle of the everyday world that is ours.
[...]
There is only one piece of advice to give to those not yet enlightened by horror novels: Push any potential preconceived notions aside, read and »Let the Right One In«!

