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  • Published: 3 April 2025
  • ISBN: 9781405968164
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 256
Categories:

Back in the Day





Taut, lyrical and utterly gripping - a headrush of a debut novel about four boys coming of age on the deprived outskirts of Oslo

Last night i got woke up by marco ringing, and he was crying, he said, he died ivor, he died, and i didnt need to hear who to know, i just hung up.

Ivor and Marco have been getting high since they were thirteen, started dealing at fourteen, by fifteen they were carrying knives. At sixteen years old, they hurtle from one trip to the next, one fight to the next, always watching their backs. Ivor dreams of getting out - finishing school, becoming a lawyer, marrying the girl he loves from the corner shop - but the path he's on only leads one way.

In flashes of firecracker prose, shot through with rare empathy, irrepressible wit and gut-punch pathos, Oliver Lovrenski gives voice to young men growing up in a brutal and chaotic world.

  • Published: 3 April 2025
  • ISBN: 9781405968164
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 256
Categories:

Praise for Back in the Day

Raw and fascinating, [with] a vulnerability and insistent vitality that shines through… Pure energy, humour, hope

Jyllands-Posten

Phenomenal. Sparklingly good, a stunningly stylish and superb debut novel… When literature is great, it opens doors to worlds, languages ?and people we often find difficult to understand. Oliver Lovrenski does this with a bang. In short: Back in the Day is a nerve-wracking, unflinching and supremely entertaining novel about four teenage boys growing up in Oslo. [It] can and should be read again and again

Soundvenue

Gripping from the very first sentence. This kind of debut only arrives once a decade

Dagsavisen

Crystal clear in thought and writing - simply a sensationally good debut

Aftenposten

Raw and fascinating, [with] a vulnerability and insistent vitality that shines through… Pure energy, humour, hope

Jyllands-Posten, Norway

Phenomenal. Nerve-wracking, unflinching and supremely entertaining… When literature is great, it opens doors to worlds, languages and people we often find difficult to understand. Oliver Lovrenski does this with a bang... [Back in the Day] can and should be read again and again

Soundvenue, Denmark

Gripping from the very first sentence. This kind of debut only arrives once a decade

Dagsavisen, Norway

Crystal clear in thought and writing - simply a sensationally good debut

Aftenposten, Norway

An urgent rush of a novel, rhythmic and raw, [about] four boys becoming men in Oslo amid bad choices and worse circumstances. It reminded me of La Haine… A deeply absorbing picture of friendship & chaos, tenderness & pain

David Hayden, author of 'Darker with the Lights On'

What a shot in the arm: the most vivid, vital book I’ve read in ages. Equally brutal and soulful, and translated with extraordinary energy, Back in the Day is less a breath of fresh air than it is a rogue wave

Lisa McInerney, author of 'The Glorious Heresies'

Blazingly original, both invigorating and heartbreaking, this debut blew my socks off. The language these characters speak crosses all boundaries. Oliver Lovrenski and Nicky Smalley have brought us a marvel -- and left us with hope for the future

Daniel Wiles, author of 'Mercia's Take'

Back in the Day is a powerful portrait of youth and young manhood, told with tenderness and a deep sense of duty towards its characters and the world they occupy. It’s tragic, beautiful and it catches you off-guard in the most unexpected ways

Michael Magee, author of 'Close to Home'

I feel drawn to this book like I feel drawn to commotion. I want to lean towards it. I want to be inside it with them. With translation that reads like a friend bigging up their friend you've never met, with a fast jittering style that pushes us forward in the text, Back in the Day feels like you're actually talking to someone

Tice Cin, author of 'Keeping the House'

A fusion of J. D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye and Jack Kerouac’s On the Road… More than anything, Back in the Day is a prototype of what literature will look like in the future

Moderna Vremena, Croatia

A stunningly stylish and superb debut novel… Breathless, nostalgic [and] unflinching. A novel that can and should be read again and again

Soundvenue, Denmark

Irresistible, unrelenting and real . . . Back in the Day is La Haine and Trainspotting, it is the myth and the truth of the fringes

Gazzetta, Greece

If you think all creative forms of expression have been tried in literature, a book like Back in the Day will shatter your assumptions. [An] explosive debut, both painful and refreshing

Tzum, Netherlands

I can’t recall seeing a debut receive the kind of attention that Oliver Lovrenski has garnered in a very, very long time. And it’s completely deserved . . . What a scorcher of a debut novel! The 19-year-old Lovrenski has burst onto the scene and into the hearts of readers with tremendous force

Verdens Gang, Norway

A thunderous debut from the edge of the abyss . . . An exceptionally exciting debut from a remarkable talent

Dagens Næringsliv, Norway

Astonishingly precise, elegant, rhapsodic

Dagens Nyheter, Sweden

Effortless [and] profound, Back in the Day is a fireworks display . . . An incredible energy emanates from the writing

NRK, Norway

Inspired by Lovrenski’s own life, Back in the Day is humorous, tender and heartfelt . . . It’s a novel that’s hard to put down and hard to forget. A novel you simply fall in love with

Brage Prize Jury, Norway

A fragmentary novel of stunning intensity

radio3, Germany

An exceptional literary talent

Adresseavisen, Norway

A linguistically brilliant and long-lasting insight into a hidden world

Welt am Sonntag, Germany

Simply outstanding

VG, Norway

Intense and resonant, unconventional and impressive

Buchkultur, Germany

Oliver Lovrenski writes compellingly, casually and lyrically at the same time

Kulturtipp, Germany

Raw and unfiltered, it reads like a journal, capturing the fierce bond between young men struggling to survive, finding both refuge and recklessness in their friendship. But are these friendships their salvation or their downfall? I was hooked from the very first page

Service95

Vivid, mordant, fleet-footed . . . A markedly different debut to the millennial ennui that we currently see too often . . . Oliver Lovrenski is a gifted writer

Sunday Telegraph

The teenage narrator of this jagged novel is bright, loyal to his friends, self-destructive and, after the death of his beloved grandmother, is sinking rapidly into a drug-addled life of kicks, stabbings and violent crime . . . This is an exercise in literary adrenaline (you can gulp it down in one sitting) . . . Its immersive brio is hard to shake off

Daily Mail

'Norway’s Trainspotting... A deep dive into the chaos, terror, and black humour of teenagers locked in a cycle of deprivation... This bleak tale, told with brio, offers a fresh take on what it is to be young in an environment where a positive future is but a dream

Herald