Describe Books Supposing Min kamp 4 (Min kamp #4)
Original Title: | Min kamp 4 |
ISBN: | 8249507142 (ISBN13: 9788249507146) |
Edition Language: | Norwegian |
Series: | Min kamp #4 |
Literary Awards: | Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize Nominee for Don Bartlett (2016) |
Karl Ove KnausgĂ¥rd
Hardcover | Pages: 472 pages Rating: 4.2 | 7499 Users | 576 Reviews
Details About Books Min kamp 4 (Min kamp #4)
Title | : | Min kamp 4 (Min kamp #4) |
Author | : | Karl Ove KnausgĂ¥rd |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | 1 |
Pages | : | Pages: 472 pages |
Published | : | February 24th 2010 by Oktober Forlag |
Categories | : | Fiction |
Narration To Books Min kamp 4 (Min kamp #4)
Karl Ove KnausgĂ¥rds tredje roman innebærer en enorm litterær satsning, og er en stor bok i mer enn Ă©n forstand: Min kamp blir utgitt som seks romaner. Første, andre og tredje bok utkom høsten 2009. Fjerde, femte og sjette bok utkommer vĂ¥ren 2010. Etter tre Ă¥r pĂ¥ gymnaset i Kristiansand reiser Karl Ove til Nord-Norge som lærervikar. Han møter en ny verden, og bærer med seg erfaringer han ikke selv forstĂ¥r. Romanen skriver frem en ung manns ufordervete grandiositet og selvpĂ¥førte ydmykelser, oppriktigheten og umodenheten og hungeren etter eksistensiell og seksuell forløsning.Rating About Books Min kamp 4 (Min kamp #4)
Ratings: 4.2 From 7499 Users | 576 ReviewsAssessment About Books Min kamp 4 (Min kamp #4)
Posted at Heradas Review ...he would have to work out the social game for himself. He would have to learn he would get nowhere by whining or telling tales. Karl Ove isnt talking about himself in this quote, but he might as well be. Eighteen year old Karl Ove spends most of the book whining about his inability to lose his virginity, and attempting to write short fiction (telling tales). You might think Im joking, but I think the moral of this story is that people should masturbate more often, andThis is volume 4 of Karl Ove Knauusgaards monumental work, My Struggle. I have loved all the books and read them almost as obsessively as they seem to have been written and this one is my favorite so far (although I was especially impressed by the first volume as well).The long seemingly minute by minute accountings of Karl Oves life as an 18 year who has taken a job as a teacher in northern Norway. The book is the most comic of the books so far, punctuated by beautiful lyrical passages. The
My initial reaction is to rate it 3 stars but I'm having a hard time actually rationalizing that score. The series as a whole is actually quite difficult to explain to the uninitiated, it usually elicits an increasingly blank stare as I drone on about its merits. But those I've convinced to begin it have all been caught up in its energy. I would guess that for many, especially women, this fourth book is the least favorite in the series. It mainly consists of the sexual angsts and alcoholic
If I could 3.5 this one, I would. It's really more of the same so it went down easily, but #4 seemed to contain fewer beautiful asides. They're there, just with less frequency than some of the earlier versions. In truth, I thought this would be a favorite, as it covers Karl Ove at age 18 when he decided to teach for one year in a provincial town of Northern Norway. As a rule, I like coming of age themes, but in this case it's overkill. Karl Ove spends the vast majority of this book trying to
If my memories were stacked in a heap on the back of my lifes trailer, music was the rope that held them together and kept it, my life, in position.Just as Brother Townes said, all you keep is the getting there. Heidegger was less than bemused by this preoccupation with the getting-there. Van Zandt is referenced per the musical orientation of the citation. I find myself disagreeing with KnausgĂ¥rd but recognize I am pondering his teenage self filtered nearly thirty years into the future. This
The healthy way to look at one's teenage angst is with a big laugh, if not, you are not far away from adolescence yet (or you have another stuck-up). This is the way KnausgĂ¥rd ends his book, with the big laugh of the adult reminiscing over what with adolescent limited tunnel view seemed the most important things in the world. It's not a ridicule laugh, it's a sympathetic one. But I literally said out loud, once reaching the final sentence, "you really ended the book this way??? really????" and I
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