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Young Anders is carried away from his bleak life as an unloved foster child in Stockholm, Sweden, to become Mio, son of the King of Farawayland.

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Caramellunacy Both are lovely, poignant children's books with plenty of adventure and a good deal of emotional resonance.
30
andejons Both are excellent adventure stories about mistreated orphan boys who suddenly find themselves in a magical world that they have to defend from an unspeakable evil, with the aid of new friends and invisibility cloaks.

Member Reviews

17 reviews
“Om inte döden vore så svår så svår, och om vi inte vore så små och ensamma.”

Min första reaktion är att bara säga "ååh, åååh" men det känns som boken faktiskt förtjänar lite mer än det, so here goes.

Mio, min Mio har varit en av mina favoriter sedan jag var liten, och det vore lögn att säga att det inte fanns en mysig nostalgi i att läsa den nu - och tänka tillbaka på när jag var liten och mamma läste den för mig om kvällarna. Men det vore också lögn att inte betona att mycket av magin faktiskt tillhör boken själv också. Det är inte endast nostalgi som trollbinder, utan även det där magiska som just Astrid ofta har i sina berättelser.

För en pojke som alltid drömt sig bort så har jag alltid show more känt igen mig i Mio, även om jag faktiskt haft lika bra föräldrar som konungen sedan första dagen, och inte minst i och med att vi delar ett namn - även om det bara var hans namn för att de inte visste att hans fader konungen redan gett honom ett namn.

Jag har sett några recensioner som påpekar att det går fort fram i boken, och det kan jag hålla med om. Dock ser jag det inte som något negativt, vilket de flesta andra verkar göra. Jag hade inte haft något problem med lite saktare tempo och mer story, men jag tycker inte att det saknas spänning eller anknytning till karaktärerna. Utan jag gillar att den påminner mycket om äldre folksagor på det sättet. Det är ett spännande äventyr samtidigt som den är så... Astrid-ig. De finns få som kan skriva karaktärer som henne.

Därtill kan jag vill tillägga att det var intressant att notera hur mycket som faktiskt liknar Tolkiens Sagan om Ringen (eller hur mycket Sagan om Ringen liknar Mio, min Mio... speciellt med tanke på att de kom ut ungefär samtidigt.)
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While Astrid Lindgren is better known for her cute children's tales, she did venture into High Fantasy with this novel and "The Brothers Lionheart".
The narrator here is Karl Anders Nilsson, an unhappy fosterchild in an unloving household. He yearns for the happy homelife of his friend, with an affable and kind hearted father.
And then a chance discovery of a genie in a beer bottle in a lonely Stockhom park sees him transported to a magical world.
Very much in the vein of CS Lewis' 'Narnia', this is a fantasy world in which the adult reader sees a strong parallel with the Christian message. Karl Anders is adopted by an utterly loving King...but while his new life is magical, he soon learns of a dark world ruled by evil Sir Kato; a world show more which intrudes on his own as children are snatched away to that grim world, leaving bereft family. Karl Anders and his friend decide to go and fight Kato.
Truly lovely tale that references the Resurrection (as the Bewitched Birds are turned back into lost children); Jesus' elevation in status after His death
(as the King remarks "Mio, my son, I do believe you've grown while you've been away! I think we shall have to put a fresh mark on the kitchen door tonight." )
and most of all the relationship between Father and Son:
"then I saw my father the King! He was standing in the very same place where I had left him when I rode away...He was standing with his arms stretched out toward me, and I threw myself into them and put my arms tightly round his neck, and he held me close and whispered "Mio, my son!"
You see, my father the King loves me, and I love my father, the King."

Can be read as pure fiction or with an awareness of the underlying message. Lovely story.
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½
This is my favorite of Astrid Lindgren's books (closely followed by Emil and Ronja) and listening to Astrid herself telling the tale brings me back to childhood and the comforts of having "Everyone's Grandma" telling you a "saga." It has just the right mix of scary and sweet, of tears and laughter. I just love it! And, no, I'll never watch a film made from this book, no matter how great it's supposed to be - the pictures in my head from childhood are too vivid and important to me. Nostalgia at its best!! :) Amazing, isn't it, that she started out writing chick-lit!
Deceptively simple and straight-forward; I sense depths that I'll better plumb upon a reread in a year or two. If nothing else I'll remember Sir Kato's stone heart for a long time....

The only reason this might be difficult for a modern American child is that the setup takes very little time, the introduction to the land of Faraway quite a bit more, and the adventure only half the book.

Lots of illustrations of little boys with bare long legs and long jerseys and horses, flowers, a cottage, a well, a grandma.... Wikland used a more casual line than he did in the Lotta books, but the pictures still charm.

Reread. Opinion holds. Beautiful story, obviously more mysterious and allegorical than a superficial reading reveals... but darned if I show more can lay a finger on exactly what it is that's going on under the surface. I bet it's even better in the original Swedish. show less
Not the best of Astrid Lindgren that I've read. Clearly one of the early books. The beginning of the magic is there but the characters are rather superficial and the pace of the storytelling is slow. the best part starts in the middle of the book when Mio has to take action.
I did like the basic sentiments about friendship and love in this book.
Хорошо, если у тебя есть и папа и мама. А если ты совсем один? Если тебе одиноко, как невыносимо одиноко девятилетнему мальчику Буссе из сказочной повести Астрид Линдгрен? Тогда воображение может унести тебя в Страну Далёкую, где король – твой отец, а сам ты прекрасный принц Мио. И даже если тебе грозит опасность и придётся сразиться с ужасным и коварным рыцарем Като, ты способен преодолеть любой страх, show more потому что в той волшебной стране всё, о чём ты мечтаешь, обязательно сбудется. show less
Not as enjoyable as the Brother's Lionheart but still a decent read. Central themes are friendship, strength to endure hardships, big risk-big reward, and leaving comfort zones. The writing is stylised and the story strongly reminiscent of traditional fairy tales and folklore- Astrid Lindgren is reliable to captivate the reader.
½

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Author Information

Picture of author.
825+ Works 45,936 Members
Astrid Lindgren: November 7, 1907 - January 28, 2002 There are few children's authors more famous than Astrid Lindgren, creator of the feisty, legendary heroine, Pippi Longstocking. Lindgren was born on November 14, 1907, in Sweden. Her work has been acclaimed with many prestigious awards, among them the Hans Christian Andersen Medal (1958), the show more Lewis Carroll Shelf Award (1978), and the International Book Award (1993). This truly internationally known author was the recipient of the Albert Schweitzer Medal and has been honored repeatedly in her native Sweden. There is a bronze statue of her in a Stockholm park. Her picture is on a postage stamp. The "World of Astrid Lindgren" is a theme park featuring the wholesome characters of her books. The annual children's literature award is known as the Astrid Lindgren Prize. The inspiration for this long and illustrious career, spanning five decades, is the author's own childhood. Her memories - of free and often wild play with her brothers and sister, of loving parents, of a close-knit farm community, of reading about heroines like Pollyanna and Anne of Green Gables - became the foundations of her books. Lindgren has said, "I write to amuse the child within me, and I can only hope that in this way other children as well can have a little fun." Lindgren amused her own children by telling them stories. Her daughter, Karin, named Pippi Longstocking, and the first written story was given to Karin as a birthday gift. The next year, 1945, Pippi Longstocking won a best children's book competition and Lindgren began writing the perennially child-pleasing stories that make up her enormous body of work, some of which are the series based on "Children of Noisy Village", the fable "The Tomten", the rambunctious "Karlson-On-the-Roof", the irrepressible"Lotta on Troublemaker Street" , the controversial "The Brothers Lionheart", and the unforgettable, wildly funny superheroine, Pippi, was featured in other books and became a star of stage, screen and television. Lindgren has been called the world's most read author of children's books. She is hailed as the third most translated children's book author after H.C. Andersen and the Grimm brothers. Her impact on the world of children's literature is immeasurable. Astrid Lindgren died in her sleep, in her home in Sweden on January 28, 2002 at the age of 94. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Astrid Lindgren has a Legacy Library. Legacy libraries are the personal libraries of famous readers, entered by LibraryThing members from the Legacy Libraries group.

Some Editions

Turner, Marianne (Translator)
Wikland, Ilon (Illustrator)

Awards and Honors

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Mio, My Son
Original title
Mio, min Mio
Original publication date
1955
People/Characters
Mio (Bo Vilhelm Olsson | English version); My Father the King; Benke; Pompoo; Miramis; The Swordsmith (show all 7); Sir Kato
Important places
Greenfields Island; Outer Land; Farawayland; Stockholm, Sweden
Related movies
Mio min Mio, or The Land of Faraway (1987 | IMDb)
First words
Did you listen to the radio on the fifteenth of October last year?
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Karl Anders Nilsson is in Farawayland with his father the King, and all is well with Mio.
Original language
Swedish

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
839.73Literature & rhetoricGerman & related literaturesOther Germanic literaturesSwedish literatureSwedish fiction
LCC
PZ7 .L65585 .MLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
1,108
Popularity
22,821
Reviews
17
Rating
(4.04)
Languages
29 — Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Kurdish, Latvian, Lithuanian, Multiple languages, Norwegian (Nynorsk), Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Ukrainian
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
123
UPCs
1
ASINs
11