
It is a grey winter when this book begins, a young woman slips around in the wet snow in the city, walks towards the bus and the very early morning takes her to a small village where she has never been before. In the village there is a house, and inside there is the kitchen table where two parents talk about their adult child whom they love above everything else, but whom they are now not allowed to meet. There is a house where silence shoots arrows into the silence and where the man thinks he has fulfilled his nuclear family quota. There is the stingy Blueberry tramp and the angry old woman who thinks you can’t be a friend to a little flower when you are dealing with shitty boots. There is the woman who disappears.
On the surface all looks calm, but then the cleaning lady Elena comes to the village. She sees not only dirt and dust, but also what has been swept away not to be dealt with.
It is the time when the grey eats up existence.
When the light is still sleeping and everything lies fallow.
But after winter comes spring. Anything can Happen.
Undone is a relationship novel. It’s about what’s been done and what’s still undone. About how it’s not too late. But that it could be, if we wait too long.