Freezing point

Anders Bodelsen, 1937-2021

Book - 2025

"Bruno, a young magazine editor, seems to live a charmed life, until he discovers a growth on his neck - the first sign of incurable cancer. But his doctor offers him a unique opportunity: Bruno can choose to be 'frozen down' until medical science has found a cure for his condition. He makes his decision, just after meeting and falling in love with an enigmatic ballet dancer. Decades later, he wakes up to find himself cured, but the world is now a very different place. Freezing technology is now ubiquitous, the pleasures of life have been subtly drained and society has started to fracture. Bruno must decide what he really wants from his life and whether it's worth the cost"--Amazon.

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Subjects
Genres
Dystopian fiction
Published
London : Faber & Faber Ltd 2025.
Language
English
Danish
Main Author
Anders Bodelsen, 1937-2021 (author)
Other Authors
Joan Tate (translator), Sophie Mackintosh (writer of foreword)
Item Description
Translation of: Frysepunktet.
Physical Description
viii, 183 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9780571393381
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this sly and visionary 1969 novel from Bodelsen (Think of a Number), reissued with a new introduction by Sophie Mackintosh, a 30-something magazine editor agrees to be cryogenically frozen until a cure is found for his terminal cancer. As Mackintosh points out, Bodelsen's book was published in a world abuzz with the possibilities of cryonics. His everyman protagonist, however, is skeptical of the experimental procedure, in part because he isn't sure whether he has reason to live. A lonely man, Bruno fills his time ginning up ideas for his magazine's contributors and doubts his own ability to become a writer. But after falling in love with ballet dancer Jenny, he's filled with enough zest for life to undergo the procedure. He wakes up in 1995, in a bifurcated world where a shrinking "now-life" class of people live off payments for serving as organ donors to the "all-life" class, who are so busy working to finance their transplants that Bruno worries people will stop reading literature. As Bruno schemes to reunite with Jenny, Bodelsen offers striking existential reflections on mortality and witty insights into the social cost of eternal life. It's a revelatory thought experiment. (Mar.)

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