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Lars Saabye Christensen

Author of The Half Brother

82+ Works 3,166 Members 72 Reviews 10 Favorited

About the Author

Lars Saabye Christensen, one of Norway's most acclaimed novelists, is the prize-winning author of ten novels as well as short stories and poetry. His works have been published in the United States and throughout Europe, as well as Pakistan. He lives in Norway
Disambiguation Notice:

The correct form of the name is Lars Saabye Christensen.

Image credit: Source: Nordic Council and the Nordic Council of Ministers' website

Series

Works by Lars Saabye Christensen

The Half Brother (2003) 769 copies, 19 reviews
Beatles (1984) 424 copies, 10 reviews
Maskeblomstfamilien (2003) 202 copies, 4 reviews
The Model (2005) 190 copies, 7 reviews
Bly (1990) 168 copies, 2 reviews
Herman (1988) 154 copies, 2 reviews
Bisettelsen (2008) 97 copies, 1 review
Graffiti Lives, O.K. (1980) 86 copies, 1 review
Echoes of the City (2017) 85 copies, 3 reviews
Saabyes cirkus (2006) 83 copies, 5 reviews
Jubel (1995) 83 copies, 1 review
Jokeren : roman (1981) 71 copies
Oscar Wildes heis : noveller (2004) 70 copies, 1 review
Bernhard Hvals forsnakkelser : roman (2010) 56 copies, 6 reviews
Den misunnelige frisøren : noveller (1997) 50 copies, 1 review
Amatøren (1977) 41 copies
Friendship (2018) 40 copies
Byens spor Skyggeboken (2019) 36 copies
Noen som elsker hverandre : noveller (1999) 35 copies, 1 review
Visning (2009) 30 copies, 2 reviews
Magnet (2015) 26 copies, 1 review
Sluk : roman (2009) 24 copies, 1 review
Ingens : noveller (1992) 22 copies
Billettene : roman (1980) 21 copies
Sneglene (1987) 21 copies
Stille lengde : noveller (2006) 17 copies
Blodets bånd (1985) 16 copies
Min kinesiske farmor (2020) 10 copies
Amatøren ; Billettene (2004) 10 copies
Onder het noorderlicht (2005) 8 copies
Blink : roman (2013) 8 copies, 1 review
Den arktiske drømmen (1993) 8 copies
Stedsans : noveller (2013) 8 copies, 1 review
Pasninger : dikt (1998) 6 copies
Graffiti 2 (1985) 5 copies
Mekka : skuespill (1994) 5 copies
Mit danske album (2010) 4 copies, 1 review
Mann for sin katt (2000) 4 copies
Sanger & steiner (2003) 4 copies
Columbus' ankomst (1986) 3 copies
Falleferdig himmel : dikt (1998) 3 copies
Vrakeren (2023) 3 copies
Die Beisetzung: Roman (2015) 2 copies
Meio-irmão (2007) 2 copies
Etter karnevalet : dikt (2014) 2 copies
Pinnsvinsol : dikt (2000) 2 copies
Le demi-frère (2004) 1 copy
Sanne gleder (2016) 1 copy
El músico (1998) 1 copy
Magnes (2018) 1 copy
En tilfeldig nordmann (2022) 1 copy
Paraply : dikt (1982) 1 copy
Sande glæder (2017) 1 copy
Obitelj cvjetnih maski (2012) 1 copy
Ordiord (2007) 1 copy
Norske stiler (2012) 1 copy
Hálfbróðirinn (2024) 1 copy
Model (2015) 1 copy
Półbrat (2014) 1 copy

Associated Works

Kingdom of Olives and Ash: Writers Confront the Occupation (2017) — Contributor — 141 copies, 4 reviews
Vinternatt : norske kriminalfortellinger (1990) — Contributor — 11 copies
Nye norske sengehester : norske forfattere skriver erotisk 1 (1990) — Author, some editions — 5 copies, 1 review
13 norske kriminalnoveller (1979) — Contributor — 4 copies
Påskekrim 2014 (2014) — Contributor — 2 copies

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Members

Reviews

Byttelapp, from 20 mars 2021, in the book. No name.
 
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Kringla | Mar 22, 2024 |
 
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Count_Myshkin | 9 other reviews | Aug 11, 2022 |
A beautiful book, occasionally funny, but above all beautiful. I enjoyed reading it very much, even if it was a sad book at times.
It contains a lot of strange stories, told by the various inhabitants of the village. For example an absurd story about a golf course in Northern Norway, in summer and winter time. Or the story about a girl determined to play the tuba.

I drove around in that area, I have images of the huts, the village, the Hurtigruten. That makes this book extra special.

The ending is drastic, but fits well with the rest of the book.
… (more)
 
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BoekenTrol71 | May 9, 2020 |
‘She just stands watching the two boys. They are still children, but the war, of which they remember barely anything and yet cannot forget, has cast a shadow over them that causes their childhood age to lose its meaning. They are already carrying the darkness of adulthood. They are children in camouflage.’

This book is the first in a trilogy (parts 2 and 3 have already been published in Norway) by acclaimed author Lars Saabye Christensen. Having previously read 3 of his works I was super-excited to get hold of this, and it certainly lives up to expectations. This is, in essence, a love letter to Oslo, its people – especially the women – and to a nation, emerging from the terrible consequences of occupation during the Second World War and a devastated economy. The novel opens in 1957 with the death of King Haakon, and then jumps back in time to 1947. The central figures of the novel are the Kristoffersen family: father Ewald, his wife Maj, and their children Jesper and Stine, who is born later in the novel. In truth, it is the area around Kirkeveien that is the main ‘character’, and the people who live and work there, from the butcher and his son, to the Kristoffersen’s upstairs neighbour, to the school teacher Lokke and the Italian immigrant Enzo. As their lives intertwine and stories develop, it is Jesper who is the one who binds them all together. He is a wonderfully created character; overly-sensitive to sounds but with a natural talent for music, he is often taken for being a bit slow, or sullen. As with much of Christensen’s novels it is a way of directing our view of events, seen through the eyes of a young(ish) child, usually a boy, which helps us to re-interpret how we, as adults, live our lives.

Interspersed with the narrative is an ongoing celebration of the work of the Red Cross in this post-war country. Minutes of meetings are given throughout, which in many ways quietly yet movingly pay tribute to the work of this extraordinary charity, but also gives a subtle insight into the lives of many people struggling to cope in these hard times. There are also, again in a quietly unforced way, genuinely funny moments as the ‘impartial’ notes give way to personal comments and opinions.

Nothing much happens, and that’s the joy of this novel. It is the small things that matter: the arrival of a telephone in the Kristoffersen’s apartment; piano lessons; selling stamps for the charity; a gentle love-affair between two widowed neighbours. There is joy and beauty in the smallest things, like a snowman in the backyard or the sound of church bells. There is a sense of the place, of the city, as there is in Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’, as we follow our characters down streets and hills and passed specific buildings. It is also profoundly moving, and I defy anyone to remain dry-eyed at certain moments.

Christensen is one of my favourite contemporary writers and, if this first book of the trilogy is anything to go by, this will stand as his defining work. For anyone who calls a city or a place ‘home’, you will recognise the people and the stories. The themes are universal, the stories deeply personal, and always it is written in such a lyrical prose that you can just lose yourself in the rhythm of the words:
‘Summer plunges this city even deeper between the mountain ridges while raising those people who remain after the others have gone, raising them into a majestic loneliness. Summer here isn’t a season. Summer is a moment in time.’
(And here, this is the moment to highlight the extraordinary translation by Dan Bartlett, always an excellent reader of tone and nuance in the original work.)

Glorious, epic in its attention to the small things in life, this book deserves to be read. I, for one, cannot wait for parts 2 and 3 to get an English translation.
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Alan.M | 2 other reviews | Oct 15, 2019 |

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Works
82
Also by
5
Members
3,166
Popularity
#8,066
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
72
ISBNs
393
Languages
23
Favorited
10

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