A few years ago Elizabeth Scalia at her website The Anchoress posted her thoughts about a biography of St Catherine of Sienna by Sigrid Undset. It was a glowing review and so I filed away Ms. Undset's name as someone I might want to read in the future. Now, thanks to the 2019 Classics Challenge - choose a classic in translation, that day has arrived. But instead of Sigrid Undset's biography of Catherine of Sienna, I decided to go with another book, The Wreath published 1920. It's the first book in Ms. Undset's highly acclaimed Kristin Lavransdatter series (The Wreath, The Wife and The Cross). Three historical novels set in fourteenth century Norway which revolve around the life of Kristin Lavransdatter.
The Wreath, begins with Kristin Lavransdatter at about age six and ends with her marriage at age seventeen. She is a very well drawn character and Sigrid Undset does a wonderful job depicting her thoughts, her conflicts, her dreams. Other interesting characters appear in The Wreath as well: Kristin's parents Lavrans and Ranifrid Bjorgulfson, Kristin's betrothed, Simon Andresson and Erlund Nikulausson the man she really loves. I was concerned that I might have trouble keeping straight the different Norwegian names of the chatacters but after a few pages it was fine and I got drawn in to Kristin's world. Kristin age six for example accompanying her father on a journey, the furthest she has been from home:
"Kristin had thought that if she came up over the crest of her home mountains, she would be able to look down on another village like their own, with farms and houses, and she had such a strange feeling when she saw what a great distance there was between places where people lived ...she knew that wolves and bears reigned in the forest, and under every rock lived trolls and goblins and elves and she was suddenly afraid, for no one knew how many there were but there were certainly many more of them than Christian people. Then she called loud to her father, but he didn't hear her because of the wind".
Later in The Wreath when her younger sister Ulvhild is seriously injured, Kristin contemplates becoming a nun and that if she enters the convent God will perform a miracle and make Ulvhild well:
"But Kristin didn't want to do it; she resisted the idea that God would perform a miracle for Ulvhild if she became a nun. She clung to Sira Eirik's words that so few miracles occured nowadays. And yet she had the feeling this evening that it was as Brother Edvin had said -- that if someone had enough faith that he could indeed work miracles. But she did not want that kind of faith; she did not love God and His Mother and the saints in that way. She loved the world and longed for the world.
It is this struggle that Kristin Lavransdatter wrestles with in The Wreath whether to do what God and her parents want and marry Simon or follow her heart and marry Erlund and as the series progresses Kristin Lavrandatter will no doubt be presented with other challenges.
In 1928 Sigrid Undset was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature and the comittee singled out The Kristin Lavransdatter novels. It's an exceptional series and not just because of the amount of research Ms. Undset did in accurately portraying fourteenth century Norwegian life but the characters have an authenticity about them as well. I really did feel that this is how people must have thought and behaved back in Medieval times. The Kristin Lavransdatter novels have been greeted with renewed interest in recent years thanks to the very fine translation by Tina Nunnally which makes these books accessible while maintaining the beauty and other worldliness of the prose. This is a series I see myself completing.
I must admit that I am not sure if I had ever heard of Undset before. There seem to be many Noble Prize winners in Literature who has become obscure. This book takes place at a what also seems to be a fairly obscure timer and place. It sounds very good. The plot sounds interesting. I will put it on my list. Maybe I can sneak it in soon.
ReplyDeleteHi Brian, good point about how many Nobel Prize Winners are out there. Sigrid Undset deserves her award but its also true that many great writers of the 20th century got overlooked. Its a very good book and Sigrid Undset took her Catholicism seriously so the book is infused with talk of God and faith but in a thought provoking way.
DeleteI have started this ages ago, got distracted and never finished it (I have the whole series in one book, so it's quite massive!), although I did like it! Thank you for reminding me - I really have to take it off the shelf & read it. I will need time for that, so maybe I'll take it on holidays with me this year... :-)
ReplyDeleteHi Ginette, I think you will like The Wreath. I would try that book first and see if you want to continue. Hope you enjoy it.
DeleteWell, as I have the entire series - all three books in one (over 920 pages in small print) - that's what I'll do. 'The Wreath' covers the first 240 pages, so it shouldn't be too much of a challenge, and I'll see where I'll go from there. I remember that it took me a while to get into it when I first started it decades ago, and then something happened to distract me - and I never took it up again. Such a shame - it comes as a highly praised book, and people keep raving about it! - so yes, I will go ahead and give it another shot later this year. I think it's one of those books you have to be in the mood for, if you know what I mean. No doubt I'll say something about it on my blog when the time has come or on Instagram :-) Again - thanks for mentioning the book on here :-)
DeleteI've heard of this author, and this series, but have never read either of them. I'm glad to hear that you liked this first book.
ReplyDeleteHi Lark, one thing I was suprised to learn is that Sigrid Undset lived in New York for a time and was friends with Willa Cather. In terms of the writing I did notice similarities, a strong central female character, a love of nature.
DeleteThat's cool that she was friends with Willa Cather. What a small world.
DeleteI've heard lots of good things about this trilogy from other bloggers so it is on my list!
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, even reading lots of classics, one doesn't encounter fiction set in the fourteenth century very often!
Hi Ruthiella, if you decide to read The Wreath I would love to know your thoughts. Good point about how historical fiction doesn't usually rise to the classic level and yet great writers often do set their novels in tne past and yet its often the more recent past not the fourteenth century.
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