Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Locals and Tourists Adore Fish and Theatre in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind


Summary: Locals and tourists adore fish and theatre in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind, first thriller in the Dark Iceland sextet authored by Ragnar Jónasson.


Siglufjarðarkirkja (Romanized Siglufjardarkirkja, Siglufjördur [“mast, sailing fjord” literally]) Church, whose bell tower anchors locals and tourists in the downtown area associated with such attractions as the fish shop and the Theatre, acts as venue for the funeral Saturday, Jan. 17, 2009, of Hrólfur (“glory wolf”) Kristjánsson ("Christ-bearer's son"), 91-year-old (Aug. 10, 1917-Jan. 9, 2009) Siglufjördur Amateur Dramatic Society chair and writer of one novel, North of the Hills, with its adored Verses for Linda and sparse poetry and short stories. Perhaps the service affects Anna Einarsdóttir ("mercy one-warrior's daughter") more than other attendees. The 24-year-old Akureyri ("sandbank field") Hospital part-time employee, Co-op part-time worker, Dramatic Society actress, girlfriend of 43-year-old Karl Steindór Einarsson ("army stone-thunder one-army's son") and primary schoolteacher applicant perhaps assumes as imminent arranging a funeral service for her grandfather, as ailing Akureyri Hospital patient; Sep. 24, 2019, image of Siglufjörður Lutheran Church: Kasa Fue, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons

Locals and tourists adore fish and theatre in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind, first thriller in the Dark Iceland sextet Siglufjörður (Romanized Siglufjördur, “mast, sailing fjord”) Detective Inspector Ari Thór Arason by Ragnar Jónasson.
Commercial flight brings Ari Thór Arason (“eagle thunder eagle’s son”) from west Reykjavík’s (“smoky bay”) Öldugata (“century street”) housing and Keflavík (“driftwood bay”) airport’s police-force training. Police Sergeant-in-Charge Tómas conducts Ari Thór 60 miles (96.56 kilometers), from Sauðárkrókur (Romanized Saudárkrókur, “sheep river hook”) airport, through Strákagöng (Strákar Tunnel, “boy tunnel”) to Siglufjördur. He drives past Aðalgata (Romanized Adalgata, “main road”) Co-op, Theatre and Town Square and Gránugata (“gray road”) police station to the Eyrargata (“gravel-bank road”) new-hire dwelling.
Ari Thór encounters Siglufjördur Amateur Dramatic Society lead actor Karl (“army”) at the downtown fish shop and actress Ugla’s (“[short-eared] owl") piano-lesson notices at the Co-op.

Siglufjördur Amateur Dramatic Society fits its annual productions into the downtown Theatre, where the sales booth of 60-year-old volunteer, Nína Arnardóttir (“goddess eagle-warrior’s daughter”), figures daily.
Ninety-one-year-old Dramatic Society chairman Hrólfur (“glory wolf”) goes from his grand Hólavegur (“hillock way”) house to get together with 95-year-old Sandra at the old people’s home. Or he perhaps hastens to the Theatre with basement-apartment renter Ugla, until fish-processing plant clerical and factory work and piano lessons help her head to Norðurgata. A furnished Norðurgata (Romanized Nordurgata, “north way”) apartment inches the Patreksfjörður (Romanized Patreksfjördur, “noble, senatorial patrician class member") native, Ísafjörður (Romanized Ísafjördur, “ice fjord”) student town-center-ward.
Ugla joins daily Theatre-goers Anna, Hrólfur, Karl, Leifur, Nína, Pálmi and Úlfur even as Ari Thór and Karl journey for fresh-daily fish in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind.

Akureyri Hospital shifts, Co-op work, her own downtown house and Theatre rehearsals never keep 24-year-old Anna Einarsdóttir (“mercy one-warrior’s daughter”), Reykjavík university graduate, away from Karl.
Forty-three-year-old Karl lives with Linda, Akureyri Hospital nurse, below Leifur (“heir”), 30-plus-year-old filling-station employee and Theatre handyman and leading-role understudy, on Þormóðsgata (Romanized Thormóðsgata, “thunder-courage way”). Karl and Linda maintain a Kópavogur (“seal pup inlet”) apartment in Höfuðborgarsvæði (Romanized Höfudborgarsvædi, Greater Reykjavík, “The Capital Region”) even after moving into Gunni’s (“battle”) neighborhood. They nestle into neighborhood niches north of Ari Thór and Ugla, more north of retired lawyer Thorsteinn (“thunder stone”) and wife Snjólaug (“snow bath”) on Suðurgata.
Sixty-nine-year-old Úlfur Steinsson (“wolf stone’s son”), Dramatic Society director and retired schoolteacher, occupies an outstanding house on Suðurgata (Romanized Sudurgata, “south way”) in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind.

Seventy-three-year-old Pálmi Pálsson (“palm/palm tree/Pole humble [one’s] son”), Dramatic Society playwright and retired diplomat, possesses housing on Hvanneyrarbraut (“gravel-bank way”) not proximitous to fish and Theatre.
The divorced husband of 12-years-younger ex-wife Sonja (“wisdom”), parent with and wife to a 5-years-younger engineer from Oslo (“foothill meadow”), Norway, quarters near Hvanneyrarbraut swimming pool. Rosalinda (“famous/flowering lime-tree”), remembering Pálmi’s father (died Copenhagen, Denmark, 1941?), and 60-year-old son Mads (“god’s gift”) relocate from Copenhagen for one week to Pálmi’s basement apartment. Pálmi stayed with his mother and studied at Siglufjördur primary school, where Anna seeks to teach, and college, where Ingólfur (“lance[-bearing] wolf”) shines as history teacher.
Perhaps Karl never tried Aarhus (“river-mouth”) or Copenhagen fish or theatre with Linda or his parents in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind, and never tries them in Akureyri.

Icelandic Embassy staffers in Copenhagen, Denmark, perhaps advised Hrólfur (“glory wolf”) Kristjánsson ("Christ-bearer's son") on Copenhagen (København, "merchants' port") activities. They perhaps aided Pálmi Pálsson's (“palm/palm tree/Pole humble [one’s] son”) father about hospital treatments for terminal tuberculosis. A different generation answered questions about Denmark college versus Copenhagen university studies and permanent versus temporary employment and residence asked by the Danish father and the Icelandic mother of 12-year-old Linda Christensen ("lime-tree [Tilia spp] Christ-bearer's son"). Different or same staffers perhaps applied similar answers to questions asked about permanent versus temporary employment and residence by Karl Steindór Einarsson ("army stone-thunder one-army's son") and his parents; Sep. 21, 2007, image of harbor-front North Atlantic House (Danish: Nordatlantens Brygge), which houses the Embassy of Iceland: Christian Bickel (Fingalo), CC BY SA 2.0 Germany, via Wikimedia Commons

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
Siglufjarðarkirkja (Romanized Siglufjardarkirkja, Siglufjördur [“mast, sailing fjord” literally]) Church, whose bell tower anchors locals and tourists in the downtown area associated with such attractions as the fish shop and the Theatre, acts as venue for the funeral Saturday, Jan. 17, 2009, of Hrólfur (“glory wolf”) Kristjánsson ("Christ-bearer's son"), 91-year-old (Aug. 10, 1917-Jan. 9, 2009) Siglufjördur Amateur Dramatic Society chair and writer of one novel North of the Hills, with its adored Verses for Linda and sparse poetry and short stories. Perhaps the service affects Anna Einarsdóttir ("mercy one-warrior's daughter") more than other attendees. The 24-year-old Akureyri ("sandbank field") Hospital part-time employee, Co-op part-time worker, Dramatic Society actress, girlfriend of 43-year-old Karl Steindór Einarsson ("army stone-thunder one-army's son") and primary schoolteacher applicant perhaps assumes as imminent arranging a funeral service for her grandfather, as ailing Akureyri Hospital patient; Sep. 24, 2019, image of Siglufjörður Lutheran Church: Kasa Fue, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Siglufjarðarkirkja_in_Siglufjörður_Sept_2019_3.jpg
Icelandic Embassy staffers in Copenhagen, Denmark, perhaps advised Hrólfur (“glory wolf”) Kristjánsson ("Christ-bearer's son") on Copenhagen (København, "merchants' port") activities. They perhaps aided Pálmi Pálsson's (“palm/palm tree/Pole humble [one’s] son”) father about hospital treatments for terminal tuberculosis. A different generation answered questions about Denmark college versus Copenhagen university studies and permanent versus temporary employment and residence asked by the Danish father and the Icelandic mother of 12-year-old Linda Christensen ("lime-tree [Tilia spp] Christ-bearer's son"). Different or same staffers perhaps applied similar answers to questions asked about permanent versus temporary employment and residence by Karl Steindór Einarsson ("army stone-thunder one-army's son") and his parents; Sep. 21, 2007, image of harbor-front North Atlantic House (Danish: Nordatlantens Brygge), which houses the Embassy of Iceland: Christian Bickel (Fingalo), CC BY SA 2.0 Germany, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kbh_Nordisches_Kulturzentrum_1.jpg

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