Winner of the Icelandic Literature Prize Chosen by the booksellers of Iceland as the best novel of 2015 Longlisted for the National Translation Prize 2019 "This is epic literature." Jon Gnarr, author of The Indian Sigurdsson is without a doubt one of the best writers of his generation. Frettabladid Icelandic humour mixed with fantasy and historical facts, Orfi is a rare find. This novel proves that Ofeigur Sigursson is one of the most noteworthy and original authors of his generation. Fria Bjork Ingvarsdottir / Visja culture program, Radio 1, Iceland But the novel certainly inherits Thomas Bernhards style of reports of reports of reported speech, leading to sentences like the following which closes the first section, much as mathematical brackets close a formula . . . Highly recommended and one to watch in the 2019 Best Translated Book Awards. The Mookse & The Gripes Its a brilliant, ecstatic, hallucinatory arabesque consisting of nested tales of decreasing reliability and increasing self-awarenessall centering upon this blasted Icelandic emptiness where having or knowing anything seems only barely possible, where one glimpses the struggle to verify the contents of the world in bleakest terms. David Searcy, The Literary Hub Part adventure, part history, and part madness! Sigurdssons nested rant of a narrative swept the literary awards in his native Iceland and is now one of the best books translated into English this year. and the winner isORAEFI: THE WASTELAND!!!! Keaton Patterson, Brazos Book Buyers Book of the Year Awards "A bold and startling novel." Viv Groskop, The Guardian "A bold and startling novel." Viv Groskop, The Guardian Stunning novel . . . What follows is a collection of Icelandic stories, realist and mythic, historical and fictional, nestled inside an epic adventure. It is at once a history of place, and a mans intensely personal journey through the elements of the land, and of his own mind. A delightfully complex play on the epistolary novel, the narration of Orfi is layered, at times coming to us through five or six levels of character interpretation. The Arkansas International Amazing storytelling, plotting, perfect recursive structuring, just compulsively readable. . . I thought Id put in a word today for the book from Deep Vellum that is completely rocking my December days! take a chance! Itll change your perspective! John Darnielle, The Moutain goats Sigursson takes on such a variety of moods and modes that he acts as a kind of ventriloquist, allowing an enormous variety of literature to speak through him. And it is wildly entertaining, this book. Its both playful and deeply researched, bleak and yet heartylike a pub full of friends clinking glasses just before the end of the world. Except the friends are all PhDs. And the pub is a gigantic igloo. And the end of the world is an April Fools Day prank. Katherine Coldiron, Carolina Quarterly Go buy it! its worth reading. Three Percent Readers who are willing to yield to Orfi, to open themselves to the unpredictable, will find in these pages one of the most vivacious, most ferociously inventive novels available in any language today. Alec Dewar, Splice Easy to summarize, but impossible to explain Oraefi is a strange amalgamation of explorers tale, travelogue, historical fiction, collection of dramatic monologues, and celebration of place names. Ostensibly the story of a scholar who nearly dies while exploring a wasteland in Iceland, the story meanders through multiple layers and narrators like a stream flowing from the glacier to the forest to the sea. Its a wild ride, unlike anything youve read. Staff pick by bookseller Josh Cook Porter Square Books Oraefi: The Wasteland is an insane, swaggering beast of a novel that incorporates everything from volcanoes to feral sheep to death metal in a tale that literally defies the imagination. Its a rollicking, sui generis quest story brought to English in all its idiosyncratic complexity by Lytton Smiths stellar translation.Keaton Patterson, Brazos Bookstore (Houston, TX)