Edith Unnerstad (1900–1982)
Author of The Saucepan Journey
About the Author
Works by Edith Unnerstad
Toppen and I at the Croft 10 copies
Muck 8 copies
Bricken : roman 7 copies
Ankhästen sagor 4 copies
Snäckhuset 4 copies
Bockhornsgränd 3 copies
Leksaksekon : dikter 2 copies
Susann : roman 2 copies
Jag älskade Clarinda 2 copies
Larry makes music 2 copies
Ensam hemma med Johnny 2 copies
Á ævintýraleiðum 1 copy
The picnic 1 copy
Hoppentopp 1 copy
Kasperssons far till landet 1 copy
Isoĩdin matkassa 1 copy
Associated Works
The Young Folks' Shelf of Books, Volume 04: Just Around the Corner (1962) — Contributor — 163 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Unnerstad, Edith Alice
- Birthdate
- 1900-07-28
- Date of death
- 1982-12-29
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- Finland
Sweden - Birthplace
- Helsingfors, Finland
- Place of death
- Djursholm, Sweden
- Places of residence
- Helsingfors, Finland
Åland, Finland
Södertälje, Sweden
Stockholm, Sweden - Education
- Detthowska School
- Occupations
- children's book author
poet
screenwriter
radio writer - Short biography
- Edith Unnerstad, née Totterman, was born in Helsinki, Finland, to Swedish parents. When she was 10 years old, the family returned to Sweden, settling in Sodertalje and then Stockholm. She attended Detthowska School and an art school in Stockholm. She wrote her first book at age 11. Three years later, she published two poems and a story in a magazine. In 1924, she married Arvid Unnerstad, a radio engineer, with whom she had a daughter. She finally achieved her dream of becoming a professional author at age 32, when she published her first children's book, Uffe reser jorden runt (Uffe Travels the World). She went on to publish many works of children and adult fiction and poetry, radio, television, and movie scripts. Her biggest successes were books about the Pip-Larsson family that began with Kastrullresan (The Saucepan Journey, 1949), adapted into a film, and continued with Nu seglar Pip-Larsson (The Pip-Larssons Go Sailing, 1950). These characters were the basis of a hit 1998 Swedish television series called Pip-Larssons. The Pip-Larsson stories and others were translated into English and were part of a wave of Scandinavian books that influenced children's literature after World War II. Her last book, a historical young adult novel with autobiographical details called Bara Sara, was published posthumously in 2007.
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Statistics
- Works
- 36
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 349
- Popularity
- #68,500
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 52
- Languages
- 6
- Favorited
- 1
How else to help children learn to fly from the nest if not to let them stretch their wings first?
The Michael Joseph Ltd. translation is a bit stilted at times, but I can tell it was difficult, not the least because of the word-play the clever children indulged in. The illustrations by [a:Ilon Wiklund|6471485|Ilon Wiklund|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-632230dc9882b4352d753eedf9396530.png](the reason I chose the book) are charming as always. The fact is that the children have all had experience sailing, and that four of the six are teenagers, and so their adventure is believable. I especially love that the three eldest are the girls, and so they have plenty of courage and sense, and are perhaps, in their ways, more developed & authentic persons than each of the younger boys.
It does stand alone well enough, but I wonder if I can find the first in any of my libraries...… (more)