hwacharge.blogg.se

Hunger by Knut Hamsun
Hunger by Knut Hamsun









Hunger by Knut Hamsun

The real heart of this novel, however, is the land itself. His monologue near the end will echo within you for months to come and contains a message that is still timely today. Geissler, the enigmatic manic-depressive who turns up from time to time, is the books most memorable character. are real neighborhood weirdos that you encounter and not just some name on a page, so when reading about their actions it causes you to laugh and say “oh she would say or do that!”. You feel as if characters-such as the comical busybody Oline You watch their struggles, successes, sadness and share in the local gossip over the course of generations, giving the novel a feel that will put fans of East of Eden or The Good Earth right at home. Hamsun has a charm of seemingly bringing you into the ever growing Sellenara home of Isak and Inger and allowing you to cozy up by the fire with the family. Here readers will find a colorful cast of some of the most human characters since Tolstoy.

Hunger by Knut Hamsun

He masterfully manipulates time, as it passes in spurts sometimes burning quickly through chunks of years or slowly moving through a season, yet the pace and flow never falters as Hamsun seems to evenly disperse his timeline.Ĭharacters have always been a strong point for Hamsun. The novel begins with a youthful Isak setting out on his own and by the end he is reflecting upon old age as he begins to embrace the deterioration of his strength and body and leave the future in the hands of his full grown children. It is quite impressive how so little yet so much seems to transpire in this relatively short novel (324pgs in the Penguin Classics edition) and the vast length of time that goes by. The typical quirks of Hamsun are still present, and avid readers will find his unmistakable voice booming from the pages. While Hunger was gritty, raw and frantic, Growth delivers a very controlled and serene prose.

Hunger by Knut Hamsun

Growth of the Soil-written 27 years after his other classic and debut novel, and one of my personal favorite books of all-time, Hunger-displays Hamsun at a much more matured writing style. Powerful in its sublime simplicity, Growth is the life and times of Isak, following him as he cuts his legacy from the untamed wilds of Norway in a fight against Modernity. Growth of the Soil, Nobel laureate Knut Hamsun’s 1917 novel widely regarded as his masterpiece, is that novel. 'Then comes the evening.' Those who have seen the film Hamsun, starring Max Von Sydow, will recall seeing several scenes with Marie Hamsun finishing a novel with this line at book readings.











Hunger by Knut Hamsun