Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Kjell Askildsen

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Occupation
  
Writer

Period
  
1953–

Language
  
Genre
  
Short stories, novels


Nationality
  
Norwegian

Name
  
Kjell Askildsen

Citizenship
  
Norwegian

Role
  
Writer

Kjell Askildsen Derfor er Kjell Askildsen nummer n Litteratur

Born
  
September 30, 1929 (age 94) Mandal, Norway (
1929-09-30
)

Books
  
Et stort ode landskap, A Sudden Liberating Thought: Selected Stories, Selected Stories

Awards
  
Aschehoug Prize, Riksmal Society Literature Prize

Nominations
  
Nordic Council's Literature Prize

Kjell askildsen interview the resistance came to stay


Kjell Askildsen (born 30 September 1929) is a Norwegian writer. He is probably best known for his minimalistic short stories.

Contents

Kjell Askildsen LES DERNIRES NOTES DE THOMAS F Kjell Askildsen Littr

maria kjell askildsen


Personal life

Kjell Askildsen Kjell Askildsen Novellkonstens mstare DIXIKON

He was born in Mandal as a son of bailiff and politician Arne Askildsen (1898–1982) and Aasta Håverstad (1898–1978). Before the Second World War his father was the bailiff of Mandal and Halse og Harkmark from 1928, a board member of the Norwegian Lutheran Mission since 1939, and also a member of the school board and city council. During the war and occupation of Norway, his father was imprisoned in Arkivet twice, before escaping to Sweden in 1944. Two older brothers of Kjell Askildsen were held captive in Grini concentration camp.

Kjell Askildsen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

After the war, Askildsen enrolled in the Independent Norwegian Brigade Group in Germany. He was married to a German woman for some time. From August 1951 to March 1968 he was married to Edith Dorothea Mathiessen, and from June 1992 he has been married to Gina Giertsen.

Writing career

Kjell Askildsen Askildsen Kjell Norske Forfattere Hovedsiden

His first book, the short story collection Heretter følger jeg deg helt hjem (1953), raised controversy, especially in Mandal, for its sexual content. After that book, Asklildsen concentrated mainly on novels. He was awarded the Mads Wiel Nygaards Endowment in recognition of his novel, Omgivelser (1969), which was made into the 1973 movie Maria Marusjka, directed by Oddvar Bull Tuhus and starring Peter Lindgren.

From 1982 on, all of Askildsen's published books have been short story collections. It is mainly these books that made him one of the most acclaimed modern writers in Norway. Thomas F's siste nedtegnelser til almenheten (1983) won him the Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature. In 2006, a jury appointed by the newspaper Dagbladet voted that collection the best prose book written in Norway during the last 25 years [1]. He has won other awards as well, almost one for each new publication.

His writings have also been translated into other languages. He wrote his last short stories for "Hundene i Tessaloniki" ("The dogs of Thessaloniki"), published in 1996, and has published new collections of old stories since.

Awards and prizes (selection)

  • 2010 - Sørlandet Honorary Award
  • 2009 – Swedish Academy Nordic Prize
  • 2004 – Det Norske Akademis Pris til minne om Thorleif Dahl
  • 1997 – Oktober Prize
  • 1996 – Brage Prize Honorary Award
  • 1995 – Dobloug Prize
  • 1991 – Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature for Et stort øde landskap
  • 1991 – Aschehoug Prize
  • 1987 – Riksmål Society Literature Prize
  • 1983 – Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature for Thomas Fs siste nedtegnelser til allmennheten
  • 1969 – Mads Wiel Nygaard's Endowment
  • Ikaros-prisen
  • References

    Kjell Askildsen Wikipedia