
Lowest Common Denominator
Pirkko Saisio, Mia Spangenberg
£14.99
Description
‘Playful and profound… a captivating glimpse into twentieth-century Finland through the eyes of a charismatic child narrator. I loved it’ Fiona Mozley
‘Grandma made me take lots of naps. She believed sleep was the most important thing in the world for children. And that adults should be allowed to drink their afternoon coffee in peace.’
In this charming patchwork of fever dreams and memories, Pirkko Saisio transports us to the 1950s Finland of her youth, where she navigates life as an only child of communist parents. Convinced she will grow up to become a man, a young Pirkko keeps trying and failing to meet the expectations of the adults around her. But as she discovers that she can be the narrator of her own story, it is in language that she finds a refuge and a way to be seen at last.
In a world where mascara-streaked mermaids dodge tennis balls, a beloved green cap is stolen by the Big Bad Wolf, and the first tugs of infatuation are inspired by a swimsuit-clad circus announcer, Saisio captures the heart-wrenching intensity of childhood as it floods back in the wake of her father’s death.
Deeply moving and disarmingly funny, Lowest Common Denominator is the first volume in a trilogy that has been celebrated in Finland as the best work of the century.
Publisher Review
Playful and profound, Lowest Common Denominator offers a captivating glimpse into twentieth-century Finland through the eyes of a charismatic child narrator. I loved it -- Fiona Mozley Like Annie Ernaux but funny -- Irene Bluche * rbbKultur * This is both family history and contemporary political history, sexual self-discovery and artist biography... moving and clever, funny and beautiful * NZZ am Sonntag, Best Books of the Century * If you love Deborah Levy, you'll adore Pirkko Saisio * Le Masque et la plume * Long an object of study in Finland, Saisio's work is beginning to gain more global recognition now, cementing her place in the canon of autofiction that also includes the Nordic writers Karl Ove Knausgaard and Tove Ditlevsen -- Niina Pollari * Los Angeles Review of Books * Saisio gives us a humorous and empathetic account of the challenge of coming to terms with the world we are born into. It's a world animated by the distances between generations, shimmering with the individuality of parents, grandparents, aunts, and uncles. Sensual, curious, imaginative and funny, Saisio reminds us that being someone's child can be a deeply queer experience -- Anna Poletti
Find this book on the following lists
-
What is Team B Reading This Week?
Browse The List -
What I’ve Been Reading Recently – Laura (Jul ’25)
Browse The List -
Mr B’s Bookseller’s Dozen – August 2025
Browse The List -
August 2025 New Releases: Fiction
Browse The List -
Pick Up a Paperback – August ’25 Fiction
Browse The List
Book experts at your service
What are you looking for?