Synopses & Reviews
The epic novel of man and nature that won its author the Nobel Prize in Literaturethe first new English translation since the novels original publication ninety years ago
When it was first published in 1917, "Growth of the Soil" was immediately recognized as a masterpiece. Ninety years later it remains a transporting literary experience. In the story of Isak, who leaves his village to clear a homestead and raise a family amid the untilled tracts of the Norwegian back country, Knut Hamsun evokes the elemental bond between humans and the land. Newly translated by the acclaimed Hamsun scholar Sverre Lyngstad, Hamsuns novel is a work of preternatural calm, stern beauty, and biblical powerand the crowning achievement of one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century.
Review:
"
Growth of the Soil impresses me as among the very greatest novels I have ever read. It is wholly beautiful; it is saturated with wisdom and humor and tenderness."
H. G. Wells
"The whole modern school of fiction in the twentieth century stems from Hamsun."
Isaac Bashevis Singer
About the Author
Knut Hamsun (1859 &1952) won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1920.
Sverre Lyngstad has translated Hamsun's other novels for Penguin Classics and is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English and comparative literature at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
Brad Leithauser is a MacArthur Prize &winning novelist, poet, and critic who writes frequently about Nordic literature and teaches at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts.