The first woman to receive the Nobel Prize for literature, Selma Lagerlof assured her place in Swedish letters with this popular book. Originally published in 1891, Gosta Berling's Saga was Lagerlof's first novel, and it remains widely acclaimed as her finest work. The 1924 silent movie version launched Greta Garbo's international career, introducing a new generation to these imaginative stories of peasant life amid the scenic splendor of northern Sweden. Lagerlof drew inspiration from her grandmother's recountings of the legends, superstitions, and fairy tales of their native province in the rural Varmland region. Gosta Berling's Saga features a vivid cast of characters, headed by the eponymous hero, a country pastor whose appetite for alcohol ends his ministerial career. The former clergyman falls in with a dozen vagrant Swedish cavaliers, who steer him into a power struggle with the richest woman in the province. Steeped in supernatural lore, the novel marked a departure from the era's literary realism and helped usher in the Swedish Romantic revival of the 1890s. Its colorful vignettes and striking symbolism continue to enchant readers around the world. Book jacket.
Lagerlof's most active readership these days, in America and even in Sweden, thinks of her chiefly as the author of the children's classic about Nils and the goose. Gosta Berling's Saga is anything but a children's book. In an Old Norse sense, it IS a saga, though more rooted in the viking romances about giants and shape-changers than in the geneological realism of the Icelandic sagas. There's nothing like Gosta Berling in 19th C British literature; the closest comparison in English, I think, is to the stories of the American Nathaniel Hawthorne, who also wrote of a more "haunted" time gone by, of agitated consciences, of semi-conscious and fully malevolent forces of nature. Gosta Berling is also anything but a novel, in the normal sense. In its conception, it's a suite of legends and family memories, probing the psychology of Lagerlof's own lost world, the Varmland of the boom times associated with the iron rush, when everybody was larger, or at least richer, than life. In this context, one might think of her work as comparable to Faulkner's or Nabokov's. But Lagerlof is the daughter of a Scandinavia that still shared its reverence of God with its conviction of the presence of Thor and Loki there in the winter darkness. Gosta Berling, in fact, is scarcely to be regarded as a human, and certainly not as a hero or anti-hero. Gosta is Loki, pure and simple, a spirit of defiance to civilized Christian propriety, who links together Lagerlof's magical tales by his omnipresence. There's a lot of Gosta Berling in Ibsen's Per Gynt, but the most brilliant heir of Lagerlof's genius is the 20th C Icelandic writer Halldor Laxness. Both Lagerlof and Laxness, by the way, were Nobel Prize winners. Gosta Berling is funny, poignant, bitter, nostalgic, blunt and poetic. The interludes of nature writing are literally spell-binding, if one recalls the root runic meaning a a spell. It deserves a much wider readership. I read it first in Swedish, years ago, but I took up this English translation because of other reading I've been doing. The translation doesn't have the blue-haired trollish weirdness of the Swedish, but it's accurate and enjoyable.
The Story of Gosta Berling has everything one needs
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
My first copy of this book was given to me by a Swedish friend, a surgeon, over fifty years ago. It was an English translation, but I learned later that it has all the humanity, all the humour, all the excitement, all the pathos, all the magnetism, all the sadness, and all the ability to enchant, whether read in English or in the original language of Swedish. Nobody is too young, nobody is too old, to enjoy this book, as long as they still have a heart and mind capable of feelings. For me, this book, by a nationally famous and popular authoress named Selma Lagerlof, and The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint Exupery, share my love. Both writers are now deceased, and both remain national figures in their respective countries, Sweden and France. Love, did I write? Yes, of course. I should know. I am an elderly lawyer. If you do not enjoy the book, you should be in prison!
Great!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
This book can be mystified and confusing if you end in the first chapter. But if you go on, it's full of symbolistics and imagination is needed. It's a great book, from the way the author wrote and how it is delivered. Don't be tempted to end reading it in the first chapter, because everything will be clear in the end.
Wild Wave of Adventure
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Saga is acclaimed by many as her finest work; it is certainly her most popular. Lagerlöf drew on stories of legendary figures in her rural province in south-central Sweden to weave this epic tapestry of passions, her first major published work.The story revolves around the character of Gösta Berling, who begins the book in despair after drunkenness costs him his post as a country pastor. Through the apparent generosity of the Lady of Ekeby, he falls in with twelve aging "cavaliers" who live in a separate wing of her manor house. In a turn of events that bears the devil's stamp, the Lady is turned away from Ekeby, giving Gösta Berling and the cavaliers full run of the estate and its mines, provided they remain true to their code to do nothing that is "sensible or useful." Let it be said that they succeed in this resolve; whether the community benefits from their mischief is a matter of serious debate.Lagerlöf's masterpiece can be enjoyed on many levels. The setting provides a fresh departure from contemporary life, illustrating a simple country existence. Lagerlöf's treatment of characters ranging from peasantry to nobility satisfies the reader's moral sense, as sympathy is extended toward the dispossessed, a harsh light shone on selfish or calloused souls, and a gentle wit bent on those exhibiting minor follies. The cavaliers provide charming foils to the melodrama of Gösta's love interests; to this is added a profoundly supernatural element. The symbolism recalls the power of pagan rites, as well as the consciously Christian theme of forgiveness, while the premise of the saga recalls the Faust legend. Gösta Berling's Saga deserves renewed attention from students and lovers of literature.
Passionate Brillance
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This is not the type of book I would usually read. I'm not into romantics, I generally read "geeky" stuff like science fiction, popular science, and your basic information-filled things. But I do step out of my "usual" every once in awhile and read some popular fiction, or some classic lit. A friend once read a chapter of this book to me, saying: "it's like sitting at a table listening to an old woman tell a story." ..and it *is*. This has become my *favorite* book. The author translates the absolute passion of youthful love and tragic pain with a pure and beautiful intensity. Within the first few chapters it becomes easy to see why she won an award. --Gypsy.
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