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Mysteries 
Hamsuns aptly named second novel, Mysteries, is a dazzling, dark look into human nature and mans psyche. It is no surprise that Henry Miller claimed that Mysteries was closer to me than any book I have read, this novel is so probing and insightful that you feel it begin to pick your own mind as the pages churn by. Written in 1892, just 2 years following Hunger, this novel once again demonstrates Hamsuns signature frantic yet serene prose while showcasing Hamsun as a Modernist far ahead of his
I refused to read Hamsun for a long time, on the grounds that he was a Nazi sympathizer. But I started getting interested in modern Norwegian literature a couple of years ago, and in the end I had to give in. You just can't avoid him; he's referred to everywhere. And if I find him hard to deal with, I'm comforted by the fact that it's much worse for the Norwegians.Let me expand on that a bit. I'm English by birth, and I've also lived a fair amount of my life in Sweden and the US. None of those

AcknowledgmentsIntroduction & NotesSuggestions for Further ReadingTranslator's Note--MysteriesExplanatory NotesTextual Notes
Mysteries [1892] ★★★★Is there any way of knowing? There are so many strange things between heaven and earth, beautiful, inexplicable things, presentiments that cant be explained, terrors that make your blood freeze [Knut Hamsun/Gerry Bothmer [1892/1971: 161].Translated from the Norwegian by Gerry Bothmer, Mysteries begins with the following lines: In the middle of the summer of 1891 the most extraordinary things began happening in a small Norwegian coastal town. A stranger by the name of Nagel
When I was a teenager my dad urged 2 novels on me - Hermann Hesse's Glass Bead Game and Knut Hamsun's Hunger - which I consider all-time favourites to this day. Hesse I loved immediately; I read everything of his I could find. But Hamsun took a little longer. Upon first reading Hunger I thought, 'Huh? That's it?' It's not that I didn't like it, but it perplexed me. Hesse - and most if not all of my parents' other recommendations (Marquez, Kundera, Eco, Grass) - had seemed so... grand, somehow.
A man, Johan Nilsen Nagel, blew into town a created a stir because of his uncetain origins, unpredictable behavior and sometimes odd appearance. He'd try to help some people but would often be misunderstood. He himself would also be confused about his own motivations.I read this as an allegory. Passages and phrases here and there reminded me of the biblical story of Jesus Christ. Even the way Nagel died here hints strongly of Christ's agony on the cross and in the Garden of Gethsemane before he
Knut Hamsun
Paperback | Pages: 348 pages Rating: 4.09 | 5358 Users | 360 Reviews

Itemize Books To Mysteries
Original Title: | Mysterier ISBN13 9780374530297 URL http://www.hamsun.dk/dk/hamsun_boger.html |
Characters: | Johan Nagel |
Setting: | Norway |
Description As Books Mysteries
In a Norwegian coastal town, society's carefully woven threads begin to unravel when an unsettling stranger named Johan Nagel arrives. With an often brutal insight into human nature, Nagel draws out the townsfolk, exposing their darkest instincts and suppressed desires. At once arrogant and unassuming, righteous and depraved, Nagel's bizarre behavior and feverish rants seduces the entire community even as he turns it on its head—before disappearing as suddenly as he had arrived.Describe Appertaining To Books Mysteries
Title | : | Mysteries |
Author | : | Knut Hamsun |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 348 pages |
Published | : | August 8th 2006 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (first published 1892) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Classics. European Literature. Scandinavian Literature. Novels |
Rating Appertaining To Books Mysteries
Ratings: 4.09 From 5358 Users | 360 ReviewsRate Appertaining To Books Mysteries
Contains spoilersI feel somewhat uncomfortable expressing tepid feelings about a book thats universally praised as a phenomenon in world literature but I was less than impressed with Mysteries. Perhaps it was that it was oversold on the back cover (the author was pronounced to have complete omniscience about human nature, where I only found incomplete, albeit self-absorbed, knowledge about a certain type of male person), or that I read it in 2016 with my firmly 2016 point of view, or that I cantHamsuns aptly named second novel, Mysteries, is a dazzling, dark look into human nature and mans psyche. It is no surprise that Henry Miller claimed that Mysteries was closer to me than any book I have read, this novel is so probing and insightful that you feel it begin to pick your own mind as the pages churn by. Written in 1892, just 2 years following Hunger, this novel once again demonstrates Hamsuns signature frantic yet serene prose while showcasing Hamsun as a Modernist far ahead of his
I refused to read Hamsun for a long time, on the grounds that he was a Nazi sympathizer. But I started getting interested in modern Norwegian literature a couple of years ago, and in the end I had to give in. You just can't avoid him; he's referred to everywhere. And if I find him hard to deal with, I'm comforted by the fact that it's much worse for the Norwegians.Let me expand on that a bit. I'm English by birth, and I've also lived a fair amount of my life in Sweden and the US. None of those

AcknowledgmentsIntroduction & NotesSuggestions for Further ReadingTranslator's Note--MysteriesExplanatory NotesTextual Notes
Mysteries [1892] ★★★★Is there any way of knowing? There are so many strange things between heaven and earth, beautiful, inexplicable things, presentiments that cant be explained, terrors that make your blood freeze [Knut Hamsun/Gerry Bothmer [1892/1971: 161].Translated from the Norwegian by Gerry Bothmer, Mysteries begins with the following lines: In the middle of the summer of 1891 the most extraordinary things began happening in a small Norwegian coastal town. A stranger by the name of Nagel
When I was a teenager my dad urged 2 novels on me - Hermann Hesse's Glass Bead Game and Knut Hamsun's Hunger - which I consider all-time favourites to this day. Hesse I loved immediately; I read everything of his I could find. But Hamsun took a little longer. Upon first reading Hunger I thought, 'Huh? That's it?' It's not that I didn't like it, but it perplexed me. Hesse - and most if not all of my parents' other recommendations (Marquez, Kundera, Eco, Grass) - had seemed so... grand, somehow.
A man, Johan Nilsen Nagel, blew into town a created a stir because of his uncetain origins, unpredictable behavior and sometimes odd appearance. He'd try to help some people but would often be misunderstood. He himself would also be confused about his own motivations.I read this as an allegory. Passages and phrases here and there reminded me of the biblical story of Jesus Christ. Even the way Nagel died here hints strongly of Christ's agony on the cross and in the Garden of Gethsemane before he
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