Ove is insufferable, and Backman wants you to know it before he gives you a single reason to forgive him. He inspects his neighborhood every morning like a man patrolling a border, has strong opinions about the correct way to park a car, and treats any deviation from his routine as a personal insult. It would be easy to write a character like this as a punchline and stop there. Backman doesn't stop there, and the slow unpeeling of why Ove got this way, without ever excusing the worst of it, is the actual architecture of the book.
The present-day plot is almost slapstick: a pregnant woman named Parvaneh and her hapless husband back a U-Haul into Ove's mailbox within the first chapters, and from there Ove's carefully defended solitude gets invaded by degrees, a stray cat he pretends not to feed, neighbors he pretends not to help, a teenager he pretends not to mentor. Backman gets real comic mileage out of Ove's absolute refusal to admit he's being won over, and the timing of these scenes, short chapters that land a joke and then cut away before it curdles, keeps the book moving at a real clip even when nothing large is technically happening. A gay teenager thrown out by his father ends up on Ove's sofa before Ove has decided how he feels about any of it, and the book never makes a speech out of his eventual, grudging acceptance; it just shows up as one more thing Ove does without being asked twice.
Running underneath that comedy, in alternating chapters, is the story of Sonja, the woman who saw past Ove's rigidity decades earlier and married him anyway. These flashback sections are where the prose slows and softens, and Backman is careful never to make Sonja a saint who fixed a broken man. She's funny, stubborn in her own right, and genuinely delighted by a person everyone else found impossible. Watching young Ove build an entire personality around protecting her, and watching what's left of him after she's gone, reframes every irritable habit in the present-day chapters as something closer to mourning than meanness. Backman gives Sonja a teaching career and a spine of her own opinions, so the marriage reads as two people choosing each other repeatedly rather than one woman patiently fixing a project.
The book does telegraph its emotional turns. You can usually see two chapters ahead which relationship is about to crack Ove's shell a little further, and a reader looking for surprise in the plot mechanics will find the pattern repeats itself. That's a fair trade for what the repetition buys: by the third or fourth time a neighbor shows up needing something Ove insists he has no time for, the joke isn't on Ove anymore, it's on how obviously he's become the load-bearing wall of a street full of people who'd never say so out loud. Backman trusts the reader to do that math without spelling it out in a summarizing sentence, which is part of why the repetition never quite tips into padding.
What I didn't expect was how directly the book handles loneliness in old age, the small humiliations of being treated as obsolete, the particular grief of outliving the one person who made your rigidity legible as love instead of just stubbornness. Backman writes Ove's numerous, half-hearted attempts on his own life with a tone that never tips into either flippancy or melodrama, which is a harder balance than it sounds and one the book maintains all the way through.
Why you should read
- Like a grumpy protagonist who slowly reveals real depth
- Enjoy book-club fiction mixing comedy and grief
- Want a found-family story built from an unlikely neighborhood
- Like alternating timelines that recontextualize the present
What to expect
- Short, punchy chapters that alternate past and present
- Comic setups that resolve into genuine tenderness
- A predictable emotional arc traded for real payoff
- Direct handling of grief, aging, and loneliness
By the end, Ove hasn't changed so much as been recognized, which is a different and in some ways more moving thing than a redemption arc. The last chapters gather up nearly every minor character introduced earlier and give them a reason to have mattered, and I found myself genuinely surprised by how much I cared what happened to a cat that spends most of the book being described as ugly. It is not a book that needs a twist to land its final chapters; it needs only for you to have believed, by then, that a man this stubborn was worth the trouble of understanding.