Fed to Red Birds
Rijn Collins
Fed to Red Birds
Rijn Collins
Elva loves Iceland for many reasons – the epic landscape of gods and volcanoes, weather that’s the polar opposite of her home in Australia, and the fact that it’s where her mother might have gone back to when she disappeared. Iceland is where Elva’s beloved grandfather – the famous children’s book author – lives in a remote village and where the beings that haunt her imagination reside.
Elva is interested in the odd things people make – Victorian collectibles, old spells, taxidermy, fairy tales. The weird, the wonderful and the sometimes macabre. She’s got a few quirks of her own that she’s (mainly) keeping under control. Except one.
Working in a shop of curiosities, studying at an Icelandic language school, Elva begins to explore her obsessions, and when her grandfather suffers a stroke, they threaten to overtake her. Then she meets Remy, a painter who’s got some secrets of his own …
In her captivating debut, Rijn Collins has created a beautifully evocative portrait of an enchanted mind in an enchanting place – a story of everyday magic, both dark and light; of families and the shadows they can cast; of the delights and dangers of the imagination. Fed to Red Birds will transport you to remote corners of both the world and the human heart.
Review
Rosalind McClintock
In Fed to Red Birds, award-winning short-story writer Rijn Collins has written a love story about Iceland, its language and the magic of isolation. That may sound strange, but for protagonist Elva-Bjalla, it is a balm.
Named after a character from an infamous children’s book written by her Afi (grandfather), Elva has left her hometown of Melbourne for Iceland, where she is looking for some connection to her mother, who disappeared when she was a child. The life she has built for herself is small, but cosy. She travels between her sparse apartment, where she keeps her darkest secret locked behind a hidden door, to work at a shop of curiosities with her close friend and boss, Grace, to language classes, swimming, and her friend Tollie’s bar. All the time the threat of deportation hangs over her if she doesn’t pass the language exam. But also, the threat of something more – a compulsion. A compulsion that grows when her Afi falls ill, and she finds herself unable to keep things under control. To others, her interest in taxidermy may be what sets her apart, but in fact it is her connection to her fairy-tale namesake.
Collins has drawn on Nordic tradition, and successfully created a world where the possibility of magic seems real. The magic does not overwhelm the story, but thrums in the background, propelling Elva forward, while her friends enfold her in their arms and turn her in the right direction. The friendships Elva makes, like her efforts at taxidermy, are things of unique beauty. Collins has captured the joy and love that friendship can bring, even to one who thinks they seek solace, because, ultimately, we are all seeking connection and acceptance – exploring that is where Collins excels.
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