The wandering pine
life as a novel
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Author
Contributions
- Bragan-Turner, Deborah, translator - Contributor
Publication
2015 - MacLehose Press, London, England
Language
English
Word Count
97,750 words, Guess
Page Count
391 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivewanderingpinelif0000enqu
- Internet Archivewanderingpinelif0000enqu_c0a2
- ISBN-100857051709
- ISBN-100857051717
- ISBN-101780870191
and 9 more
- ISBN-139780857051707
- ISBN-139780857051714
- ISBN-139781780870182
- ISBN-139781780870199
- ISBN-101780870183
- OCLC Control Number896852081
- Better World Books9781780870199
- Better World Books9780857051707
- Open LibraryOL28684039M
Classifications
- DDC839.7374
- LCCPT9876.15.N78 A8413 2015
- LCCPT9876.15.N78
Description
What was it about Hjoggbole, a farming village in the northernmost part of Sweden, that created so many idiots - and writers? There was nothing to indicate that P.O. Enquist would be stricken by an addiction to writing. Nothing in his family - honest, hardworking people. Not a trace of poetry. And yet he worked his way, via journalism, novels and plays, to the centre of Swedish politics and cultural life. His books garnered prize after prize. His plays ran for decades and premiered on Broadway. Why then, living with a new wife in Paris, does he hole up in their palatial Champes-Elysees apartment, talking only to his cat? How is it that he wakes to find himself in an uncoupled carriage on a railway siding in Hamburg, two - or was it three? - days after the first-night party finished? And what is it that drives him to run shoeless through the deep January snow of an Icelandic plain, leaving the lights of the drying out clinic far behind? Narrating in the third person, as if he were merely a character in the eventful, perplexing and ultimately triumphantly redemptive drama of his own life, P.O. Enquist is as elliptical as Karl Ove Knausgaard is exhaustive. Clear-eyed, rueful, written with elegance and humour, this is the singular story of a remarkable man.
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