The Wonderful Adventures of Nils: & The Further Adventures of Nils

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CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2017/02/02 - 430 ページ
Selma Lagerl f story of Nils, the bad boy that gets turned into a tiny elf, and of his adventures in animal-land, has become a real fairy classic. Seldom has such intricate weaving and interweaving of fact and fancy, history and tradition, fairy lore and nature craft, been accomplished so deftly... the style is simple and natural, the story whimsical and rich in delicate humor. (New York Sun)Selma Lagerl f is the greatest imaginative genius in modern literature. Few men or women in the world have ever had the right to write fairy stories, but Selma Lagerl f in one of them. (New York American)

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著者について (2017)

Selma Lagerlöf, winner of the Nobel Prize in 1909, was the first woman to be elected a member of the Swedish Academy. Her first novel, The Story of Gosta Berling (1891), assured her position as Sweden's greatest storyteller. She retold the folk tales of her native province, Varmland, in an original and poetic prose. As a woman writer, Lagerlöf gained a reputation as a naive purveyor of native traditions, but she herself compared writing a novel to solving a mathematical problem. Her artistry entails making her stories seem simple, but they are told with great attention to symbolism, psychology, and narrative technique. The Wonderful Adventures of Nils (1906) is a delightful fantasy written to teach children about Swedish geography, but it has found an international audience. Her third novel and masterpiece, Jerusalem (1901--02), the story of farmers from Dalarna who follow their faith to the Holy City, was widely praised for its insights into the lives of peasants searching for a spiritual ideal. During World War II, Lagerlöf helped many German artists and intellectuals escape the Nazis, even donating her gold Nobel Prize medal to a benefit fund to help Finland. She died of a stroke on March 16, 1940.

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