Son Of Svea

A Tale of the People's Home

Son Of Svea
Sarah Death, Lena Andersson
RRP:
NZ$ 37.00
Our Price:
NZ$ 29.60
Paperback
h203 x 133mm
1 Feb 2022 US
International import eta 7-19 days
9781635420043
Out Of Stock
Currently no stock in-store, stock is sourced to your order
From one of Sweden' s most astute cultural critics, a razor-sharp comedy of the progress and ruin of the industrial welfare state, told through the story of a single family. Ragnar Johansson is born in 1932, a transformative moment in Swedish history. He has Swedish social democracy flowing through his veins-convinced it lifted humankind out of the dark ages and into modernity, he cherishes it. At times Ragnar despises his mother, Svea, whose perpetual baking, scrubbing, and canning represent the poverty of the peasantry. Ragnar, for his part, hails the efficiency of washing machines and prefab food. Once he has children himself, he raises them in accordance with his values, standing in the ski track supporting his daughter Elsa as she works hard to become one of the best skiers in the country. While Svea is a relic of the past, Elsa represents hope for the future. In time, however, Ragnar realizes that the world is changing. Is his golden age coming to an end? In Son of Svea, Lena Andersson offers a characteristically funny, wise, and moving family chronicle about the social transformations that unite and divide us, and about finding the courage to be true to oneself.
"Intellectual, agile, sharp, occasionally uncomfortable, always uncompromising, Son of Svea is a novel about modern Sweden from our most important voice, Lena Andersson. Her crystal-clear prose shapes Son of Svea into an absolute gem of a book. " -David Lagercrantz, #1 bestselling author of The Girl in the Spider' s Web "Lena Andersson' s epic novel moves through a century of Scandinavian idealism like a winter storm. Son of Svea opens with the founding of social democracy, roars on through the rise of the welfare state and the murder of Olof Palme, and reaches an icy end in the ex-utopian Stockholm suburbs. Lena Andersson has an unparalleled eye for how ideology and family life interweave, turning the myths of modernism into something warmer and more intimate. Andersson' s novel is a powerful ode to the humble people who gave Scandinavia the one thing America misses most of all: upward mobility that is more than just a dream. " -Mikkel Rosengaard, author of The Invention of Ana "Son of Svea is a sharp, skillful look at social democracy and the welfare state in Sweden through the life of Ragnar Johansson-a determined and at times infuriating ' ordinary' man who rises and recedes with the political movement. Born to a working-class father and an uneducated mother from the countryside, Ragnar sees the state as the answer to all of life' s problems, despite his own confusion and ambivalence about the world and his place in it. His mother, Svea; wife, Elisabet; and children, Erik and Elsa, are forced to contend with Ragnar' s fervent, sometimes cruel and fanatical beliefs about the correct way to live-beliefs that are eventually overwhelmed by time and change. This deeply interior novel provides a nuanced view of a social and political landscape that often glitters from afar, but is-like all places-complicated and full of contradictions. " -Karen Engelmann, author of The Stockholm Octavo "Ragnar Johansson is an ordinary Swede-which is what makes this delightful novel so extraordinary. From the shape of his palm to his politics, Ragnar, born in 1932, embodies the Swedish social democratic idea that being different is dangerous and thinking yourself special, in any way, is shameful. But Ragnar' s world is changing and, for his children, a life of ' quiet tedium,' ' without aspiration' may not be enough. With wit, warmth, and a precise eye for detail, Lena Andersson shows us how being ordinary can be both a gift and a burden. Son of Svea will make you laugh and cry and, most important, think deeply about what it means to live a good life. " -Nancy Marie Brown, author of The Real Valkyrie: The Hidden History of Viking Warrior Women "Lena Andersson' s Son of Svea is an insightful dissection of the rise and fall of the Swedish welfare state, or ' people' s home,' as it is known in Sweden. She writes with wry humor that walks the fine line between comic and tragic without ever putting a foot wrong. Andersson' s keen eye for the subtle detail of many types of social mobility and the tragedy of different generations never truly connecting makes for a thought-provoking reading experience. " -Emmi Itaranta, author of Memory of Water "Lena Andersson' s precise, sharply drawn character types correspond to distinct groups in Swedish society, and her dry wit gently pokes fun at some of the downsides of the people' s home, but with deep affection for it. Son of Svea does a terrific job of inviting the reader to see through the eyes of a representative mid-twentieth-century Swede, who would likely never be willing or perhaps even able to explain exactly how they see the world. It illustrates the Nordic concept of Jantelagen (the law of Jante) in a very engaging, wry way. " -Julie K. Allen, author of Danish, But Not Lutheran "Andersson puts deep and complex faces to the past-bound Sweden of the early twentieth century, the designed Sweden of the people' s home, and the unraveling welfare state of the late twentieth century. Through Svea, Ragnar, Elsa, and Erik, many of Sweden' s great transformations of the twentieth century are revealed in human terms. " -Byron J. Nordstrom, Professor Emeritus of History and Scandinavian Studies at Gustavus Adolphus College and author of The History of Sweden Praise for Lena Andersson: "Every word packs a punch; every other sentence is so wise and funny that it begs to be quoted. Andersson' s gift for conjuring atmosphere and emotion out of small quotidian mishaps is extraordinary. " -The Guardian "An electrifying writer. " -Times Literary Supplement "Dry wit and sharp insight. . . If [Andersson] sees an intellectual pretension, she pricks it. " -The Economist
Lena Andersson is a novelist and a columnist for Svenska Dagbladet. Considered one of Sweden' s sharpest contemporary analysts, she writes about politics, society, culture, religion, and other topics. Her fifth novel and English-language debut, Willful Disregard, was awarded the 2013 August Prize, Sweden' s highest literary honor. Sarah Death has translated nearly forty books, including Lena Andersson' s earlier novel Willful Disregard. She has twice won the George Bernard Shaw Prize for translation from Swedish, and in 2014 she was inducted into the Royal Order of the Polar Star for services to Swedish literature.

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