How many more years do you have to go?
porni
Nevertheless, there are oddities that?non-Icelandic readers will find problematic. A nursery worker includes "a child with a Senegalese father" in a?list of children with disabilities, a view that goes unquestioned by the narrator. "Foreigners" appear repeatedly as a?subspecies, whether lost in central Reykjavik, working on a highland dam, or cooking and eating protected snow buntings. The same kinds of generalisation apply to gender. "It is no small feat for a woman to have to stick to the?right-hand side of the road; that's where reason reigns, not the heart." This isn't a feminist novel.