Hallgrímur spent autumn 1995 in
Park Slope,
Brooklyn, NY, writing his third novel,
101 Reykjavík. It was published in 1996 and turned into a successful movie in the year 2000, directed by Baltasar Kormákur and starring Hilmir Snær Guðnason and
Victoria Abril. The novel takes its title from the postal code of the
Reykjavík downtown area. It is a first person narrative, set in the strange mind of Hlynur Björn, a mid-nineties slacker who never leaves the downtown area, is unemployed and lives with his mother. He spends his days on the internet or watching videos, and his nights at the K-bar, a fictional hangout based on the famous Kaffibarinn, which at the time was partly owned by
Damon Albarn, the famous singer of
Blur. The novel coincided with and accidentally captured the rise of Reykjavík as a trendy city, launched by the fame of its best known citizen,
Björk. Hallgrímur invented the character Hlynur Björn in the summer of 1990 and used him from time to time as his own
Borat, allowing him guest appearances on his radio show, Radio Manhattan, and thus developing his strange style of thinking and talking over a period of five years. The idea for the plot came partly from the French movie,
Gazon Maudit, by
Josiane Balasko (also starring Victoria Abril), and
Shakespeare’s
Hamlet. Like Hamlet, Hlynur Björn becomes burdened by his mother’s sex life, when she comes out of the closet as a lesbian, and introduces him to her girlfriend, the much younger Lolla, whom Hlynur Björn already has slept with. Things get even more complicated when it is revealed that Lolla is pregnant. The book was originally met with negative reviews and poor sales in Iceland, but later found an international readership, after the movie won prizes at several film festivals. It was nominated on behalf of Iceland for the
Nordic Council Literature Prize in 1999. It became a bestseller in Italy and Poland and has been published in 14 languages. American novelist
Tim Sandlin famously wrote in his review: “Imagine if
Henry Miller had written
Tropic of Cancer on crack instead of wine.” ==Author of Iceland==