cover image Reptile Memoirs

Reptile Memoirs

Silje Ulstein, trans. from the Norwegian by Alison McCullough. Grove, $27 (400p) ISBN 978-0-8021-5886-4

Ulstein’s choppy debut charts the nightmarish connections among two women, an unhinged cop on the verge of retirement, and a tiger python. In 2003, nursing student Liv and her two hard-partying roommates buy the snake and name it Nero, though Liv quickly claims the snake for herself, locking it in her room and growing sexually aroused when feeding it. In 2017, Mariam refuses to buy her 11-year-old daughter, Iben, a comic book, and the girl runs away. Chief Inspector Roe Olsvik, 60, is assigned to the case of Iben’s disappearance. He suspects Mariam of foul play, and his investigation soon crosses several ethical boundaries. The trauma of abuse is central to both Liv’s and Mariam’s stories, with Liv having been assaulted by her older brother growing up, and Iben being the result of a rape that occurred before Mariam was married. Chapters narrated by Nero, who reflects on his snake siblings and at one point does a very bad thing, add an awkwardly fey perspective (“I saw her face. Something was dripping from it—salty drops from her eyes,” he recounts of Liv), and psychological intrigue abounds as the parallel narratives gradually coalesce, revealing Olsvik’s motivations for stalking Mariam. There are some surprises, as not every character turns out to be who they seem, but the twists largely feel contrived and the result of fortuitous discoveries. Still, the depiction of the characters’ pain adds depth to this literary thriller. (Mar.)