One of the world's most famous artists, J KAT, is dying and his most famous painting, of the sea, a pier and three figures sitting at the end of the pier, is being auctioned. What no one knows is that the winning bid comes from the artist and he reclaims the picture he painted at fifteen. The figures at the end of the pier are his friends, his chosen family, Joar, Ali and Ted. Before he dies, the artist finds a young girl painting on the walls of an ally and he recognizes another talent as original as his. He makes the decision to leave her the painting.
Ted has lived with the artist for the past few years, tending him in his illness. He finds the girl, Louisa, and gives her the painting. She doesn't want to take it, not believing in her own art or why anyone would like it. But this is just like the artist at her age and Ted knows the artist has made the right decision.
In order to convince Louisa to take the painting, he pays for them both to take the train back to his hometown where he hasn't been in twenty-five years and tells her the story of the summer the painting was created and the four friends who loved each other.
Ted's father died when he was eight and he has never recovered from that. Ali has a con man for a father and the family has to move whenever his cons are discovered or he borrows money he can't pay back. Joar lives with an alcoholic father who beats him and his mother mercilessly. The artist lives in a vacuum at home, no one in his family talking or caring about anyone else. When they find each other, they make their own family and that summer seems like it will last forever.
Fredrik Backman's novels have been huge successes and this one is no different. He writes about the difficulty of growing up and the need of children to have love. If they can't get it at home, they will find friends to give it to. Although there is death in this book, it is life-affirming and the reader will be swept into the lives of these four teenagers and how they survive in a cold world, a world that has identified them as outsiders. The love between the four is inspiring and the recognition of Louisa as the same kind of person and the way she is brought into their world is fascinating. This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.





























