Charlotte Löwensköld

by Selma Lagerlöf

Löwensköld trilogy (2)

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A curse rests on the Lowenskold family, as narrated in The Lowenskold Ring. Charlotte Lowenskold is the tale of the following generations, a story of psychological insight and social commentary, and of the complexities of a mother-son relationship. C

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2 reviews
I read and enjoyed the short novel The Löwensköld Ring earlier this year, and was looking forward to following the second installment of this ghost story. But what I got was something pretty different. Taking place a generation after the first book, this is a story of love, duty and dark misunderstandings, where the supernatural is barely hinted at.
Charlotte is of the noble family Löwensköld, but of a branch that has fallen from grace. She is living with relatives, an elderly minister and his wife, in the country. She’s engaged to the young, promising cleric Karl-Artur, but he’s too obsessed with living in poverty and piety to even plan for marriage. When the rich foundry proprietor Schagerström proposes to Charlotte on a whim, show more Karl-Artur goes completely mad with jealousy. It doesn’t matter that she said no, he breaks off the engagement and vows to propose to the first girl he meets as he storms out. Which happens to be the wandering sales woman Anna Svärd. Not a very fitting party.
What follows from there is a winding, constantly interesting plot – at times heartbreaking or infuriating. As a reader you never know where things might go next (and with the ending of the first book in fresh memory, you know for sure that Ms. Lagerlöf won’t hesitate to let things end badly either… ) Selma Lagerlöf is often seen as a bridge between gothic, early realism and modernism in Swedish literature, and it’s very true here. For this book feels very old-fashioned in a way. But the way it’s told, with deep insights on the flaws, pettiness and humanity of the characters, lots of inner monologues and some great stylistic tricks, it becomes something that is original and exciting. Like Schagerström, who hardly recognizes he has everything because of his obsession with his own ugliness. Or Karl-Artur, so full of love towards humankind, but so quick to believe everyone of the worst. Or Thea, who is so eager to be in the presence of greatness she sells all honesty. Or the colonel’s wife, oblivious of how she constantly outshines her children. Or Charlotte herself, vain, ill-tempered and full of gloom. A great, complex cast populating a story where it’s unclear to the very end how things will turn out. This could well be Lagerlöf’s masterpiece – I don’t even miss the general’s ghost one bit!
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½
Deze roman vertlet een aantal gebeurtenissen rond de titelfiguur, een weesmeisje dat verloofd is met een dweepzieke hulppredikant die ze verlaat om te trouwen met een oudere weduwnaar. Een parade van uiteenlopende karakters.

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Picture of author.
525+ Works 7,901 Members
Selma Lagerlöf, winner of the Nobel Prize in 1909, was the first woman to be elected a member of the Swedish Academy. Her first novel, The Story of Gosta Berling (1891), assured her position as Sweden's greatest storyteller. She retold the folk tales of her native province, Varmland, in an original and poetic prose. As a woman writer, Lagerlöf show more gained a reputation as a naive purveyor of native traditions, but she herself compared writing a novel to solving a mathematical problem. Her artistry entails making her stories seem simple, but they are told with great attention to symbolism, psychology, and narrative technique. The Wonderful Adventures of Nils (1906) is a delightful fantasy written to teach children about Swedish geography, but it has found an international audience. Her third novel and masterpiece, Jerusalem (1901--02), the story of farmers from Dalarna who follow their faith to the Holy City, was widely praised for its insights into the lives of peasants searching for a spiritual ideal. During World War II, Lagerlöf helped many German artists and intellectuals escape the Nazis, even donating her gold Nobel Prize medal to a benefit fund to help Finland. She died of a stroke on March 16, 1940. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
Charlotte Löwensköld
Original title
Charlotte Löwensköld
Original publication date
1925
People/Characters
Charlotte Löwensköld; Karl-Artur Ekenstedt; Beate Ekenstedt; Gustaf Henrik Schagerström; Thea Sundler
Important places
Korskyrka; Karlstad, Sverige
Related movies*
Charlotte Löwensköld (1930 | IMDb); Charlotte Löwensköld (1979 | IMDb)
First words
En gång i tiden fanns det i Karlstad en överstinna, som hette Beate Ekenstedt.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Den unge brukspatronen kunde begagna sig av den givna tillåtelsen.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
839.78Literature & rhetoricGerman & related literaturesOther Germanic literaturesSwedish literatureSwedish miscellany
LCC
PT9767 .C5 .N6Language and LiteratureGerman, Dutch and Scandinavian literaturesSwedish literatureIndividual authors or works19th centuryLagerlöf, Selma
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Statistics

Members
75
Popularity
419,384
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (4.46)
Languages
10 — Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, German, Italian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Romanian, Russian, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook
ISBNs
15
ASINs
1