(4/17/2018)
In 1950, an archeological find by a childhood friend's father finds a fully preserved man, approximately from 375 to 210 B.C, in a Danish peat bog and is given the name The Tollund Man. Now only his head remains.
Tina Hopgood and her childhood girlfriends were enthralled by the discovery, both from curiosity and the fact that the father of one of the girls made the discovery. And the girl's father, Professor Glob, dedicated the book in 1964 to the girls who were curious about archeological finds and had written letters to him. Because of this Tina had always felt emotionally linked to the Tollund Man.
Fifty years later, Tina Hopwood, never having visited Denmark, is still curious and writes Professor Glob. She finds her letter responded to by Kristian Larsen, now curator of the museum, after Professor Glob. And so begins a correspondence between them, initially about the Tollund Man and they continue their letter writing as each of them discovers the meaning to their own past and current histories and a sense, as they reveal themselves to each other, what they have missed in their lives.
The book is the back and forth letters between the farm wife Tina Hopgood and the widowed curator Kristian Larsen and as each of them unleashes themselves from all that has held them back, an emotional intimacy that has eluded them for many years begins. They begin to feel a deep kinship with each other, a love of sorts, more intimate than romantic. I found myself unable to put the book down, almost like a wonderfully woven mystery, wondering what revelations and what secrets would be unearthed in the next letter. Even more than these two characters and the reflection that they bring to each other, I found myself bringing that same reflection to my own life. I liked the book immensely and I know it will resonate with me for a long time.