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Kristin Lavransdatter

(Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)

Kristin Lavransdatter( )
Author: Undset, Sigrid
Translator: Nunnally, Tiina
Notes by: Nunnally, Tiina
Introduction by: Leithauser, Brad
Series title:The Kristin Lavransdatter Trilogy Ser.
ISBN:978-0-14-303916-7
Publication Date:Sep 2005
Publisher:Penguin Publishing Group
Imprint:Penguin Classics
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $30.00
Book Description:

'[Sigrid Undset] should be the next Elena Ferrante' -Slate The Nobel Prize-winning masterpiece by Norway's literary master Kristin Lavransdatter is the epic story of one woman's life in fourteenth-century Norway, from childhood to death. Sensitive and rebellious Kristin is sent to a convent as a girl, where she meets the charming but irresponsible Erlend. Defying her parents' wishes to pursue her own desires, she marries and raises...
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Book Details
Pages:1168
Detailed Subjects: Fiction / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.655 x 8.307 x 1.911 Inches
Book Weight:2.666 Pounds
Author Biography
Undset, Sigrid (Author)


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 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).

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