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!! Download PDF World Light, by Halldor Laxness

Download PDF World Light, by Halldor Laxness

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World Light, by Halldor Laxness

World Light, by Halldor Laxness



World Light, by Halldor Laxness

Download PDF World Light, by Halldor Laxness

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World Light, by Halldor Laxness

As an unloved foster child on a farm in rural Iceland, Olaf Karason has only one consolation: the belief that one day he will be a great poet. The indifference and contempt of most of the people around him only reinforces his sense of destiny, for in Iceland poets are as likely to be scorned as they are to be revered. Over the ensuing years, Olaf comes to lead the paradigmatic poet’s life of poverty, loneliness, ruinous love affairs and sexual scandal. But he will never attain anything like greatness.
As imagined by Nobel Prize winner Halldor Laxness in this magnificently humane novel, what might be cruel farce achieves pathos and genuine exaltation. For as Olaf’s ambition drives him onward–and into the orbits of an unstable spiritualist, a shady entrepreneur, and several susceptible women–World Light demonstrates how the creative spirit can survive in even the most crushing environment and even the most unpromising human vessel.

  • Sales Rank: #200369 in Books
  • Brand: Laxness, Halldor/ Magnusson, Magnus (TRN)/ Birkerts, Sven (INT)
  • Published on: 2002-10-08
  • Released on: 2002-10-08
  • Original language: Icelandic
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 1.07" w x 5.17" l, .99 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 624 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Solitude and its consolations-fleeting moments of divine and earthly illumination-are the central themes of World Light, a massive novel by the Icelandic writer and Nobel laureate Halld¢r Laxness. Released in trade paperback on the 100th anniversary of Laxness's birth, the novel tells the story of Olafur, an orphan boy who yearns to write poetry. His love for books-"he had a great longing to read... all the books in the world"-consoles him for his harsh treatment at the hands of his adoptive parents and accompanies him into adulthood as he contends with socialism and communism and an unhappy marriage. A new introduction by Sven Birkerts provides much useful background information and explication; the translation by Magnus Magnusson is fluent and accomplished.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
"[Laxness is] a poet who writes to the edge of the pages, a visionary who allows us a plot: He takes a Tolstoyan overview, he weaves in an Evelyn Waugh-like humor: it is not possible to be unimpressed.” -- Daily Telegraph (London)

“[An author of] compassionate, scathing novels.” –Annie Dillard, The New York Times Book Review

"[Laxness is] a poet who writes to the edge of the pages, a visionary who allows us a plot: He takes a Tolstoyan overview, he weaves in an Evelyn Waugh-like humor: it is not possible to be unimpressed.” -- Daily Telegraph (London)

“Laxness is a brilliant writer.” --The Washington Post

Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
Introduction: Icelandic

Most helpful customer reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Too Beautiful For Words...
By Vanessa Clark
Halldor Laxness is by far the most incredible author I've ever come across. After reading Independent People, one of his most famous novels, I decided to read World Light. And to be honest, I found World Light to be even better! Something about Halldor Laxness's novels always gets me sucked in. He elicits so much poetry and beauty into his works, paints the image of Iceland with such a stark, melancholy, and haunting light, while at the same time emersing you into a world that feels almost like a dream! And Halldor's characters, regardless of how crass, ignoble, and hardheaded that some of them are ( I believe the character of World Light has more heart than any other character in Laxness's books), somehow make you love, embrace, and envy them for all the struggles they go through and all the sacrifices they had to make to get there. Highly recommend WORLD LIGHT and INDEPENDENT PEOPLE. Honestly, reading the novels by such a masterful Icelandic storyteller and writer will be the most refreshing literary experience of your life. There are more to classic novels than Dickins, Austen, and Steinbeck. If you want to broaden your literary horizons and simply emerse your mind into a completely different world, read WORLD LIGHT, INDEPENDENT PEOPLE, and any other books by Halldor Laxness. If you take your time at reading and getting used to the settings, ideas, themes, and characters, it will truly be a worthwhile experience, trust me.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
"Fool, good-for-nothing, layabout, every bad name imaginable"
By D. Cloyce Smith
Pity the poor poet. And Olaf Karason, Laxness's unlikely (and sometimes unlikable) hero, commands--and even demands--our pity, for he is a most unproductive poet. "I'm the village good-for-nothing whom everyone jeers at because I stay up at night and write books about men who were just as useless as I am myself.... On the day the world becomes good, the poet will cease to suffer, and not before; but at the same time he will also cease to be a poet." Ah, yes--the familiar lament of the long-suffering artiste: poetry as martyrdom, and poetry is martyrdom. A free spirit, Olaf is not of the world, but the world--often in the form of a woman--is always grabbing him in its clutches and dragging him down in the muck.

Throughout each the four books of "World Light" (annually published as individual volumes from 1937 to 1940), Olaf plays the martyr--and his suffering is as often self-inflicted as not. We meet our scribbler as a youngster in "The Revelation of the Deity," the first and by far the best of the four books. Abandoned by his mother (who becomes an idealized muse), the boy is adopted by a family looking for someone who'll do all the chores. Caught amidst the turf wars of two unpredictably abusive brothers, he finds refuge in the folk tales told to him by his stepmother. But he spends much of his adolescence in bed with a paralyzing illness, relying for sustenance on his reluctant providers--a harbinger of his adult life's existence on the dole of whatever parish he calls home.

The remaining books follow Olaf (who is an uneven poet, like his real-life inspiration Magnus Magnusson) from his miraculous recovery and social isolation as a young poet-dreamer; through his common-law marriage, fatherhood, and the political demands of village life; to his public disgrace and imprisonment (borrowing again from an incident in Magnusson's biography) and finally his redemption in "the sun of the day of resurrection."

Unlike the pseudo-Dickensian set-up of the first book, the subsequent three parts have an episodic, repetitive, even dreamlike quality that is almost surely meant to recall Iceland's tradition of epic poems (to which there are dozens of references). But those same qualities can seem, in a novel, unfocused at times, and "World Light" is neither the most accessible nor the most coherent of Laxness's works. Yet--although its plotting is chaotic, its symbolism can be cumbersome, its themes seem contradictory--the novel remains endlessly fascinating. The first-time reader of Laxness will want to start elsewhere (I recommend "Independent People"), but anyone who enjoys his work will want to end up here.

34 of 36 people found the following review helpful.
Cosmic Fecklessness
By James Paris
Of all the Nobel prizewinners in literature, the one who most elicits an uncomprehending reaction is the late Halldór Laxness, Iceland's greatest writer of the modern era. In my reading, I have always attempted at times to cross the mainstream and see what lies beyond. Iceland is as far from the mainstream as you can get and still be part of Western Culture. What we sometimes forget is that almost a thousand years ago, Iceland was a literary giant; and some of the sagas that came from that island are among the greatest works of literature ever written.
Laxness is therefore the recipient of a great tradition. Sadly, Iceland -- after discovering Greenland and North America and giving them up as a bad lot -- became a colony of Norway, and later of Denmark. The loss of hegemony coupled with the horrendous disasters of a mini ice age and catastrophic volcanic explosions led to a grinding poverty that drained the mind and spirit.
WORLD LIGHT is at one and the same time the greatest Laxness novel I have read and also the most difficult. Its hero, the poet Olaf Karason of Ljosavik, is born into poverty and spends his youth as a foster child in a home utterly lacking in love. After being kicked out, he moves to Svidinskvik, where he becomes a ward of the parish. He writes poems in support of local Danish bigwig, Peter Palsson, whose grandiloquent "Rehabilitation Company" is behind a series of mostly abortive moves to improve the town's economy and morale. The young poet is so feckless that it is difficult to identify with him, but as the story progressed, I began to see his flaws writ large over the entire landscape.
The cigar-chomping Danes go around either claiming "I'm no Icelander, s'help me!" or attempting to prove themselves the most patriotic Icelanders of all. We see Olaf's attempts at finding himself with an incredible array of characters, including Juel Juel Juel of Grim Hairycheek Ltd, Eternity-Dave (who only has three expressions: "Jesus" ... "My Brother!" ... "Heave up!"), a succession of women who share his bed and drive him to distraction, and a supporting cast large and odd enough to populate a Dickens novel.
I did say earlier that I found this Laxness's most difficult novel. It is difficult to know where the author is headed, though at the same time I kept getting drawn into the complex plot with its thick undergrowth of transitory characters. In the end, I saw Olaf's fecklessness being mirrored in the fecklessness of the Danish colonial administration, and the fecklessness of a pre-Independence Iceland that felt lost, and indeed of all human beings cast adrift upon the waters into a cruel world that mocks the life of the spirit and ends all too soon in disorder and early sorrow.
The translator of this edition, Magnus Magnusson, writes a beautiful clear English (that also comes across in his Icelandic saga translations). British readers may remember him as the TV host of "Whose Line Is It Anyway?"
You will not be disappointed with WORLD LIGHT if you just persevere. Poverty of life and spirit never makes for easy reading, but Laxness rewards the reader who stays with him.

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