Karl Ove Knausgard Popular Books

Karl Ove Knausgard Biography & Facts

Karl Ove Knausgård (Norwegian: [kɑːl ˈûːvə ˈknæ̂ʉsɡoːr]; born 6 December 1968) is a Norwegian author. He became known worldwide for six autobiographical novels, titled My Struggle (Min Kamp). The Wall Street Journal has described him as "one of the 21st century's greatest literary sensations". Since the completion of the My Struggle series in 2011, he has also published an autobiographical series entitled The Seasons Quartet, as well as critical work on the art of Edvard Munch. He has won the 2009 Brage Prize, 2017 Jerusalem Prize, and 2019 Swedish Academy Nordic Prize. Biography Born in Oslo, Knausgård was raised on Tromøya in Arendal and in Kristiansand, and studied arts and literature at the University of Bergen. He then held various jobs, including teaching high school in northern Norway, selling cassettes, working in a psychiatric hospital and on an oil platform, while trying to become a writer. He eventually moved to Stockholm and published his first novel in 1998. Literary career Debut and follow-up Knausgård made his publishing debut in 1998 with the novel Out of the World, for which he was awarded the Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature. This was the first time in the award's history that a debut novel had won. His second novel, A Time for Everything (2004), partly retells certain parts of the Bible as well as the history of angels on earth. The book won a number of awards and was nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize. It was also nominated for the International Dublin Literary Award. It was called a "strange, uneven, and marvelous book" by The New York Review of Books. The Min Kamp books While Knausgård's two first books were well received, it was the six-volume Min Kamp series of autobiographical novels that made Knausgård a household name in Norway. Published from 2009 to 2011 and totalling over 3,500 pages, the books were hugely successful and also caused much controversy. The controversy was caused partly because the Norwegian title of the book, Min Kamp, is the same as the Norwegian title of Hitler's Mein Kampf, and partly because some have suggested Knausgård goes too far in exposing the private lives of his friends and family—including his father, ex-wife, uncle, and grandmother. The books have nevertheless received almost universally favourable reviews, at least the first two volumes. In a country of five million people, the Min Kamp series has sold over 450,000 copies. The Min Kamp series is translated into numerous languages. The books were published to great critical acclaim in Denmark, Sweden, and several other countries. All six have been translated into English by Don Bartlett for publication by Archipelago Books (US) and Harvill Secker (UK), and have been retitled in Britain as A Death in the Family, A Man in Love, Boyhood Island, Dancing in the Dark, Some Rain Must Fall, and The End (The End translated by Bartlett and Martin Aitken). The audiobooks of the English translations were recorded by Edoardo Ballerini. In a long and largely positive review of the first Min Kamp books, James Wood of The New Yorker wrote that "There is something ceaselessly compelling about Knausgård's book: even when I was bored, I was interested." Later works Knausgård served as a consultant to the new Norwegian translation of the Bible. In 2013, he published a collection of essays, Sjelens Amerika: tekster 1996–2013 ("The Soul's [or Mind's] America: Writings 1996–2013"), and as of September 2013 he is adapting his novel Out of the World into a screenplay. Between 2015 and 2016, Knausgaard published his Seasons Quartet, a series of four books entitled Autumn, Winter, Spring, and Summer. These books are also autobiographical in nature, consisting of diary excerpts, letters, and other personal materials. These books were released in English between 2017 and 2018. Knausgaard has also written works devoted to the visual arts. He co-authored Anselm Kiefer: Transition from Cool to Warm, a book in 2018 on the German artist Anselm Kiefer with James Lawrence. In 2019, Knausgaard published a monograph on the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch, and his interview about Munch also appeared as a highlight of the British Museum's 2019 exhibition catalogue, Edvard Munch: Love and Angst, by curator Giulia Bartrum. In October 2019 Knausgård became the sixth writer chosen to contribute to the Future Library project. Knausgård's essay collection, In the Land of the Cyclops (2018), was first published in English in January 2021. Novel series 2020–2023 In September 2020 Knausgård's novel Morgenstjernen ("The Morning Star"), a story about a number of peoples' everyday life in southern Norway while a mysteriously bright star appears in the sky, was published to critical acclaim in Norway. Danish and Swedish translations were published a few months later to great critical acclaim. It was sold in advance to fifteen countries. In 2021, the novel was listed by the New York Times as one of the notable books of the year. In 2021, Ulvene fra evighetens skog (English translation The Wolves of Eternity, 2023), a sequel to Morgenstjernen mainly set in the 1980s that portrays two estranged half-siblings in Norway and the Soviet Union, was published in Norway. The longest novel in the series and dealing with many questions, it prompted some critics to compare it to a 19th century Russian novel. A third book in the series with the title Det tredje riket (English translation The Third Realm, due October 2024) followed in 2022. A fourth book, Nattskolen, was published (in Norwegian) in October 2023. Critical reception Following the publication of Min kamp, Knausgård has been described as "one of the 21st century's greatest literary sensations" by the Wall Street Journal. Some consider him the greatest Norwegian writer since playwright Henrik Ibsen. His deliberately prolix and minutely detailed style drew comparison to that of French novelist Marcel Proust and his seven-volume novel In Search of Lost Time. Knausgård's 2020 novel The Morning Star was a critical success in Scandinavia. While reviewers of the English translation of the novel were more ambivalent, Knausgård was acknowledged as "one of the finest writers alive" by Dwight Garner in New York Times and "a writer of supreme interest" by Charles Arrowsmith in Los Angeles Times. Editing career Between 1999 and 2002 Knausgård was co-editor of Vagant, a Norwegian literary magazine founded in 1988. He was part of the first editorial team of Vagant in Bergen; until 1999 the magazine had been based in Oslo. Knausgård contributed essays about the writings of Don DeLillo and The Divine Comedy by Dante. He also conducted in-depth interviews with the Norwegian writers Rune Christiansen and Thure Erik Lund for the magazine. Just after he left Vagant and Bergen, his former co-editor Preben Jordal wrote a very negative review of Knausgård's second novel in the magazine, with the title «Mellom Bibel og babbel» ("Between the Bible and ba.... Discover the Karl Ove Knausgard popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Karl Ove Knausgard books.

Best Seller Karl Ove Knausgard Books of 2024

  • The Morning Star synopsis, comments

    The Morning Star

    Karl Ove Knausgaard & Martin Aitken

    A New York Times Notable Book One of NPR's Best Books of 2021"Knausgaard is among the finest writers alive.” Dwight Garner, New York TimesThe international bestseller fro...

  • Even If Everything Ends synopsis, comments

    Even If Everything Ends

    Jens Liljestrand

    Life goes on in the face of a climate crisis in this astonishing and unforgettable debut novel that follows four characters as they struggle to survive in a burning world. Even whe...

  • Der Sommer mit Ellen synopsis, comments

    Der Sommer mit Ellen

    Agnete Friis & Thorsten Alms

    Ein verschwundenes Mädchen und schweigsame Dorfbewohner dunkle Abgründe in der dänischen Provinz Als Jakob einen überraschenden Anruf erhält, weiß er, dass er sich seiner Vergange...

  • Der Beginn synopsis, comments

    Der Beginn

    Carl Frode Tiller

    Das Leben kann nur rückwärts verstanden werden, gelebt werden muss es vorwärts, heißt es bei Søren Kierkegaard. Terje liegt nach einem Suizidversuch im Sterben. Er lässt sein verpf...

  • Wie man Dinge richtig macht synopsis, comments

    Wie man Dinge richtig macht

    Ole Thorstensen

    Dies ist die Geschichte eines Dachbodens. Eines noch kalten, tristen Dachbodens in einem Osloer Mehrfamilienhaus, der einmal ein gemütlicher Wohnraum werden soll. Zimmermann Ole Th...

  • Die Resonanzen synopsis, comments

    Die Resonanzen

    Helga Flatland, Elke Ranzinger & Ina Kronenberger

    Mathilde, eine Lehrerin aus Oslo, verliert nach der Affäre mit einem ihrer Schüler den Job. Orientierungslos geworden sehnt sich Mathilde nach Einfachheit und einer natürlichen Ord...

  • Winter synopsis, comments

    Winter

    Karl Ove Knausgaard

    The second volume in his autobiographical quartet based on the seasons, Winter is an achingly beautiful collection of daily meditations and letters addressed directly to Knaugsaard...

  • Ich und meine Mutter synopsis, comments

    Ich und meine Mutter

    Vivian Gornick

    Vivian Gornick ist eine Entdeckung!Mütter sind anstrengend und bleiben es ein Leben lang. Schon als Kind spürt Vivian Gornick bei ihrer Mutter eine blinde Wut über deren Schicksal ...

  • Close to Home synopsis, comments

    Close to Home

    Michael Magee & Hannes Meyer

    Mit gerade mal 22 Jahren steht Sean an einem Scheidepunkt. Aufgewachsen im von der Wirtschaftskrise erschütterten Belfast, inmitten von Arbeitslosigkeit, Tristesse und den schwele...

  • Geschichte einer Ehe synopsis, comments

    Geschichte einer Ehe

    Geir Gulliksen

    Dies ist die Geschichte einer Ehe. Und einer großen Liebe. Es geht um eine Frau und einen Mann, die sich ein Leben teilen, es ist ein gutes. Sie führen eine moderne Beziehung. Sie ...

  • Rastlos synopsis, comments

    Rastlos

    Kenneth Moe

    Moe gelingt auf knappem Raum, wozu andere tausende Seiten benötigen: von der Einsamkeit des Verlusts und der Zärtlichkeit der Liebe zu erzählen. Ein junger Mann versucht, die Tren...

  • Wer du heute bist synopsis, comments

    Wer du heute bist

    Carl Frode Tiller

    David hat sein Gedächtnis verloren. Eine Anzeige ermutigt alte Bekannte, ihm zu schreiben, um ihm so zu helfen, die eigene Vergangenheit wiederzufinden. Ole, Tom Roger und Paula re...

  • Wie alle anderen synopsis, comments

    Wie alle anderen

    John Burnside

    Von Kritikern und Lesern gefeiert: nach »Lügen über meinen Vater« der zweite Band von Burnsides autobiografischer ReiheNach Jahren des Vorsatzes, niemals so zu werden wie sein Vate...

  • Die Spuren der Stadt synopsis, comments

    Die Spuren der Stadt

    Lars Saabye Christensen

    Was hören wir, wenn wir der Stadt lauschen? Welche Spuren hinterlässt sie in uns? Wer ist am anderen Ende, wenn wir telefonieren? Kennen wir die, die an der Straßenecke stehen, ve...

  • Alles, was ich nicht erinnere synopsis, comments

    Alles, was ich nicht erinnere

    Jonas Hassen Khemiri

    Welchen Preis zahlen wir, um nicht allein zu sein?Samuel hat so viele Gesichter, wie ihn Menschen kennen. Nun lebt er nur noch in der Erinnerung aller, und jeder erinnert sich ande...

  • Heimatland synopsis, comments

    Heimatland

    IKH Kronprinzessin Mette-Marit & Geir Gulliksen

    Zwölf literarische Stimmen aus Norwegen. Darunter so prominente Namen wie Karl Ove Knausgård, Siri Hustvedt, Dag Solstad and Tomas Espedal. Herausgeber von "Heimatland" sind IKH Kr...

  • Teich synopsis, comments

    Teich

    Claire-Louise Bennett

    Vom Geheimtipp zur weltweit gefeierten literarischen Sensation. ClaireLouise Bennett erzählt vom Alltag in einem einsamen Cottage an Irlands Westküste und verwandelt persönliches E...