Specify Books Supposing Min kamp 1 (Min kamp #1)
| Original Title: | Min kamp 1 ISBN13 9788252574586 |
| Edition Language: | Norwegian |
| Series: | Min kamp #1 |
| Literary Awards: | BTBA Best Translated Book Award Nominee for Fiction Longlist (2013), Nordisk Raads Litteraturpris (Nordic Council Literature Prize) Nominee (2010), Brageprisen for Fiction (2009), Independent Foreign Fiction Prize Nominee for Longlist (2013), Morgenbladet Book of the Year Prize Bokhandlerprisen Nominee (2009), Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature (Den norske Kritikerprisen for litteratur) Nominee (0), P2-lytternes romanpris (2009), International Dublin Literary Award Nominee for Shortlist (2014) |
Karl Ove Knausgård
Hardcover | Pages: 435 pages Rating: 4.08 | 30528 Users | 3256 Reviews

Itemize Epithetical Books Min kamp 1 (Min kamp #1)
| Title | : | Min kamp 1 (Min kamp #1) |
| Author | : | Karl Ove Knausgård |
| Book Format | : | Hardcover |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 435 pages |
| Published | : | 2009 by Forlaget okober |
| Categories | : | Fiction |
Ilustration In Pursuance Of Books Min kamp 1 (Min kamp #1)
Romanen åpner med en svimlende beskrivelse av døden. Derfra fortelles det om forfatteren Karl Ove Knausgårds kamp for å mestre livet og seg selv og sine egne ambisjoner på skrivingens vegne, i møte med de menneskene han har rundt seg. Min kamp. Første bok utforsker det å vokse opp og være overgitt en verden som ser ut til å være komplett, avsluttet, lukket. Romanen beskriver det unge blikkets varhet og usikkerhet, der det registrerer andre menneskers tilstedeværelse og vurderinger med en åpenhet som er voldsom og nesten selvutslettende i sin konsekvens.I en borende prosa som oppsøker det sårbare, det pinlige og det eksistensielt betydningsbærende, blir dette en dypt personlig roman, selvutprøvende og kontroversiell. Et eksistensielt omdreiningspunkt er farens død, et annet er kanskje hovedpersonens debut som forfatter.
Rating Epithetical Books Min kamp 1 (Min kamp #1)
Ratings: 4.08 From 30528 Users | 3256 ReviewsAssessment Epithetical Books Min kamp 1 (Min kamp #1)
My first impression of Karl Ove Knausgaard came from a black and white photograph published with a review of his book "A Time For Everything" in The New York Review of Books.He is seen smoking against the rugged Norwegian landscape, hair disheveled, wearing an old, battered tee-shirt, lost in thought. Completely and unabashedly himself, yet ill at ease. Entirely present, feet deeply rooted in the present moment, yet his mind is clearly in flight, flickering at the surface of his gaze.Thethis book is purportedly fiction, as evidenced by the fact that it won several european prizes for fiction. however, it seems like pretty much straight autobiography to me.i mean the main character has the author's name, he was born in norway and moved to sweden, as did the author. he has a wife and three children, as does the author. at one point in the book, he describes the picture on the cover of his first novel, which was designed by his brother, so i checked and sure enough it really is
I sat, leaning slightly forward, and continued to stare at the screen, but I could think of nothing to say. I shifted my weight, trying to find a more comfortable position, and scratched my head, using my left hand; my right shoulder had still not completely recovered from the skiing accident I had suffered earlier that year, when for a few days I had felt near death. Now, it was hard to remember how I had experienced that time. A small shower of dandruff landed on the keyboard, and I wondered

Reasons for Knausgaard's Reception (Notes on the Reviews)This essay has three postscripts. What follows is a negative account of vol. 1, which I read when it was first out in English; now "My Struggle" is famous, and subsequent volumes have attracted some reflective reviews. Thoughts on those at the end. At the moment, there are three postscripts: I intend to add two more, about Fred Jameson's review and Toril Moi's essay. What is in need of explanation at this point (that is, after every other
Now that all the hype over Karl Ove Knausgård cycle is over I thought its time to finally meet the guy. Almost everything about My struggle was already said, both bad and good stuff. The author was accused of every thing imaginable, of being ungrateful sonofbitch that fouls own nest, that he was hypocrite and megalomaniac, that he hurt own family in hope of making money, that he did it to win plaudits, that he cant write and the book is rubbish and pure graphomania and much more like that. On
Slow moving and full of detail, My Struggle: A Death in the Family reflects on the authors fraught relationship to fatherhood. The work doubles as the first volume in Knausgaards epic six-part portrait of himself, and a self-contained memoir about his fraught relationship to his father, who died at an early age due to alcoholism. The series centers on the lifelong conflict Knausgaard has felt between his desire for greatness and the obligations of family, and is written in plain but
For some reason, My Struggle (AKA, in the UK - 'A Death in the Family') made it into James Wood's Books of the Year 2012. Woods is, like Kakutani, a doyen of critics, and his word always carries a weight of sensitivity and intelligence gained from years of reading and teaching about literature. With Woods' nodding imprimatur bestowed upon it one would imagine the literary cachet of Knausgard's book is beyond reproach.But having read my Struggle (and boy, what a struggle) I fear for Mr. Wood's


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