Draumalandið - Sjálfshjálparbók handa hræddri þjóð | |
Title Orig: | Draumalandið |
Author: | Andri Snær Magnason |
Country: | Iceland |
Language: | Icelandic |
Publisher: | Mál og menning, Reykjavík |
Pub Date: | 2006 |
Isbn: | 9979-3-2738-3 |
Congress: | DL326 .A53 2006 |
Oclc: | 185021869 |
Dreamland - A Self-Help Manual for a Frightened Nation | |
Translator: | Nicholas Jones |
Author: | Andri Snær Magnason |
Country: | England |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Citizen Press Ltd. London |
Pub Date: | 2008 |
Isbn: | 978-0-9551363-2-0 |
Dreamland: A Self-Help Manual for a Frightened Nation (in the original Icelandic: Draumalandið — Sjálfshjálparbók handa hræddri þjóð|italic=yes) is a book by the Icelandic author Andri Snær Magnason.
It became the number one best-selling book in Iceland in 2006, and was winner of the Icelandic Literary Award, and the Icelandic Bookseller Prize the same year.[1] The English edition of the book has a foreword by the Icelandic artist Björk.
Dreamland is Andri Snaer Magnason's critique against the current decision taken by the Icelandic government to dam Iceland's rivers in order to produce energy that can be delivered to aluminium smelters. Magnason describes how Iceland's government actively have pursued the idea to attract foreign aluminium companies to Iceland with the promise of the "cheapest energy in the world". The government advertisement described Iceland's energy potential as 30 TWh/year (3.4 GW annual mean). Magnason argues in the book that in order to accomplish this, the majority of Iceland's rivers would need to be exploited.
It is set up as a series of thoughts on issues in modern Iceland and the past Iceland and deals heavily with the Kárahnjúkar Hydropower Plant and other similar works being done. It was the best sold book in Iceland in 2006 and raised Icelanders' interest in environmentalism by a large amount. In the book the Icelandic nation is encouraged to look to more "futuristic" types of business than aluminium processing and to stop believing that they can't do anything for themselves.