The Story Generator

Piratförlaget, Sweden, 2018, 250 pages
Original Swedish title: Historiegeneratorn
Genre: Interconnected short stories


Sex, danger and education policy. Conspiracy theories, mysterious disappearances and far- fetched bird metaphors. The Story Generator has it all: Teachers who go to war to create a good school environment, stories that make readers divorce and algorithms that generatebest-selling books. Yes, even kale juice and easily-o ended grumpy little men.

In this sharp, entertaining take on our twisted reality, readers are served up a generous help- ing of laughter, sorrow, excitement and fear in six interconnected stories. A meal most of us eat every day without ever thinking of what we are really digesting.

Stockholm Tales – Press

”An awesomely cool book.”
Veckorevyn

”This could well be the best paperback book of the year.”
Plaza kvinna

”An irresistible depiction of our time that with a relaxed elegance swings between high and low, yet always hits the bull’s-eye.”
QX

”Dissecting contemporary Swedish society while offering many laughs. Absurd and extremely funny short stories.”
ICA Kuriren

”Hilarious satire of the entire Swedish society.”
Svenska dagbladet

”The closest thing we’ll ever have to contemporary beat literature in Sweden.”
Blaskan

”Half-crazy short stories that makes one think of cult books such as A Confederacy of Dunces and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to The Galaxy.
Tara

”An irreverent debut book with an almost Bukowskian flow.”
Situation Stockholm

See you in the desert – Press

“The seductive mix of satire, love and free-flowing fantasy makes one think of Master and Margarita by Michail Bulgakov. It is gutsy, surprising and mad.”
Folkbladet

“One of the finest and funniest novels of the year.”
Blaskan

“Insane and crazy, a mind-blowing satire of our time.”
Aftonbladet

“Rarely have I laughed so much”
Svenska dagbladet

Herr Isakowitz’s treasure – Press

“Powerful storytelling that will make you laugh so hard your stomach hurts and cry until you lose your breath.”
ALT for damerna, Denmark

“A very special book… Gives food for thought and gratitude to be alive.”
Gyldendals bogklubb, Denmark

“A family tale of the best kind.”
Femina, Denmark

”An irresistible road movie-novel that becomes even better by the woven in portrait of a family full of chain smoking little ladies, chaotic family dinners, lucky life-saving chances and an unbearable tragedy.”
M-Magasin, Sweden

”An amazing little book.”
Metro, Sweden

“A little gem. A book so human, so warm and so much fun to read.”
Gomorron Sverige, Sweden

“Danny Wattin is constantly balancing on the razor’s edge. He navigates mischievously between irreverent humor, sharp irony and realism. An incredible roadtrip.”
The Free Tarn, France

“This autobiographical tale, infused with humor and self-deprecation, is a response to all forms of racism in general and anti-Semitism in particular.
Le Havre, France

“The novel grows into a beautiful, moving and life-affirming family tale. Not often do you come across a story so heart-warming and funny.”
Politiken, Denmark

“Gradually this patchwork of miniature portraits grows into a larger and powerful story about world history and the fate of a Jewish family… a wonderful autobiographical book.”
Berlingske, Denmark.

”A surprisingly funny, beautiful and sad book…Using humor as tool Danny Wattin tells not only the story of his own family, but of the possibilities, limitations and uttermost devilishness of humankind.”
Dagens Nyheter, Sweden

“The unique combination of the tragicomic portrayal of the living and the painstaking uncovering of the events leading up to the Holocaust transforms this book into a heartbreaking experience. Human warmth and compassion pervade the whole novel.”
Nordjyske Stiftstidende, Denmark

“We are all so accustomed to reading stories about the Holocaust with a grandiose musical soundtrack in our heads to make us cry at just the right moment, carefully planned by the writer. This book is refreshingly free of all of that. I laughed at the descriptions of people, I cried at a picture of a coathanger (yes!) and I continued to think about the book long after finishing it. It is just wonderful: funny and sad, warm and wise, without trying too hard to be any of these things. A true little gem.”
the Swedish Book Review