Books of Interest
Website: chetyarbrough.blog
The Night Guest
By: Hildur Ingveldardóttir Guðnadóttir
Narrated & Translated By: Mary Robinette Kowal

Hildur Ingveldardóttir Guðnadóttir (Icelandic Author, classical cellist, and composer –awarded an Academy Award, two Grammies, and an Emmy.)
The multi-talented Guðnadóttir has written a chilling tale of psychosis in “The Night Guest”. In one sense, it is a reflection of sexual equality, but it also reveals how complex and dangerous it is to be human. This fictional story is about an attractive single woman who is unable to peacefully sleep through the night. Every morning, she wakes up with a tiredness that sticks with her through the day. On some mornings she finds bruises or scratches on her arms and has no idea of why she feels so tired. She sees several doctors and finally finds one that takes her symptoms seriously.
Her doctor runs tests and finds nothing seems to explain the tiredness. The doctor asks her if she is depressed. The woman says she feels sad sometimes but not particularly depressed. The doctor recommends she see a psychiatrist, but she chooses to ignore the advice.

The tiredness, odd bruises, and scratches on her body continue to appear, i.e., after sleep and in the morning. She comes across an article that tells her of sleepwalkers that don’t realize they are sleepwalking at night after falling asleep. She is convinced that explains her symptoms and asks her doctor for sleeping pills. The doctor reluctantly agrees and provides a prescription. Initially, the treatment seems to help, and the young woman resumes her life, meets a new boyfriend, and begins to feel everything is okay.

The author explains the young woman is a lover of cats but notices that lately the cats in her neighborhood have become afraid of her.
When she approaches them, they hiss and raise their backs. She is mystified by their response. As the story progresses, listeners find she was involved with the owner of a company for which she works. He is married and the relationship is ended with some acrimony. The two avoid each other at the workplace but the still-married man tries to resurrect their relationship. The young woman is involved with another man and has no interest in resuming a relationship with a married man.
She returns to her belief that her sleeplessness is caused by her sleepwalking and decides to monitor her behavior with a video recording devise.

She reviews the recording to find she wakes up and leaves her bedroom for hours at a time. She is wearing a pedometer to measure the steps she takes and finds it is several thousand steps more than what it was at the end of her day. What makes her discovery ominous is that the recording shows a conscious and alert person that has to be her, but she feels that person is entirely different from herself.
The woman’s tiredness returns, and she finds one morning that all of her sleeping pills are gone. Her former married lover disappears. Her current lover tells her to never contact him again without an explanation. The denouement of the story is horrifying. Explanation of her psychiatric illness is disturbingly believable and terrifying. Human psychosis ruins lives if not properly diagnosed and treated.
