The Longest Years

by Sigrid Undset

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Elleve år (1934) inneholder Sigrid Undsets barndomserindringer fra oppveksten i Kristiania. Her kaller fortelleren seg Ingvild, et navn hun velger for å vise sin kjærlighet til faren, arkeologen Ingvald Undset, som ble syk og døde på den tiden hun skriver om. Selve byen blir sett og sanset gjennom den erindrende forfatterens barneøyne, og de voksnes problemer blir forstått og formidlet på det modne barnets vis. Men her er også vide rom for landskap, barnelek og bekymringsløs show more livsglede. Tolv år (skrevet på 1940-tallet, utgitt 1998) er en fortsettelse av ELLEVE ÅR. Vi får høre mer om foreldrenes samliv, og sommerferien i København og i Kalundborg kommer med før Ingvild beretter livfullt om skoledagene på Ragna Nielsens skole. Her slutter historien, midt i en setning. Manuskriptet til denne beretningen ble funnet blant etterlatte papirer på loftet i Sigrid Undsets hus på Lillehammer, Bjerkebæk. show less

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165+ Works 12,120 Members
Sigrid Undset was the daughter of archeologist Ingvald Undset. Cultural, autobiographical, and religious topics constitute a large and interesting portion of her fiction, which in Norway is categorized according to the time of action: medieval or modern. Jenny (1911), an idealistic and tragic love story, is one of the latter novels. Undset's show more comprehensive knowledge of medieval Scandinavian culture has its literary monuments in Kristin Lavransdatter (1920--22) and The Master of Hestviken (1925--27), historical novels that depict life in the Norwegian Middle Ages. She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1928. Norwegian criticism of Sigrid Undset's writing centers on her religiosity (she became a conservative, almost reactionary Catholic in Lutheran Norway in the 1920s; she possesses an intensity of belief that is rather naturally expressed in the medieval novels. Yet while she has written religious polemics, the medieval novels are not tendentious. In fact, the central motifs are eroticism, marriage, and family life, in short, the full life of a medieval woman who sees herself in the light of contemporary Christian beliefs. These novels are great, realistic delineations of medieval personalities. During World War II she escaped the German occupation of Norway and fled to America, where she wrote her autobiographical Happy Times in Norway (1942). (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Longest Years
Original publication date
1934
First words
The first thing Ingvild remembered was having just crawled from the lawn away to a strip of bare ground that lay in front of a hedge of green bushes.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
839.82Literature & rhetoricGerman & related literaturesOther Germanic literaturesDanish and Norwegian literaturesNorwegian literature
LCC
PT8950 .U5 .E44Language and LiteratureGerman, Dutch and Scandinavian literaturesNorwegian literatureIndividual authors or works1900-1960

Statistics

Members
69
Popularity
454,805
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
7 — Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, Italian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
10
ASINs
2