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April 14, 2026 
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| Henri Campeã |
Dear readers,
You have to applaud the commitment of a midnight release party for a new installment of a high-concept literary novel all about living in a time loop.
If “Groundhog Day” were set in the Schengen zone, it might resemble Solvej Balle’s series “On the Calculation of Volume,” though that comparison doesn’t begin to convey the philosophical, ethical and ecological dimensions of Balle’s writing.
Fans packed a bar in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, late Monday night for an event celebrating Book IV of “On the Calculation of Volume,” hosted by the Brooklyn Public Library. There were sticker sheets and free eyeglass-cleaning cloths, with no apparent reference point to Balle’s universe; there were tiny bistro tables covered with crafting material that was crowded out by cocktail coupes.
There were also flashbulbs and waivers for New York magazine, which had sent a photographer to capture portraits of attendees. (“Say ost!”) It’s possible the party had a greater carbon footprint than Balle herself has generated in decades, since she refuses to fly or drive and rarely leaves the Danish island she has long called home.
Our critic A.O. Scott reviewed Balle’s latest novel, and took stock of the series as a whole. In the interest of avoiding spoilers — however futile that may be for a series that has followed a woman named Tara for thousands of Nov. 18s — I won’t mention any of Book IV’s developments. But Scott raises a poignant question that’s worth wrestling with no matter where you are in the series: “Is this gentle, melancholy project best read as a protest, a warning or a comforting fairy tale?”
See you on Friday.
In other news
- Tucker Carlson is going into books. His new imprint, a joint venture between his media company and a conservative-leaning publisher, will release titles by Russell Brand, Milo Yiannopoulos and more.
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