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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dag_SolstadDag Solstad - Wikipedia

    Dag Solstad (born 16 July 1941) is a Norwegian novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist whose work has been translated into 20 languages. [1] He has written nearly 30 books and is the only author to have received the Norwegian Literary Critics' Award three times. His awards include the Mads Wiel Nygaards Endowment in 1969, the Nordic Council ...

  2. Solstad is a writer of depth… he has air.”. Karl Ove Knausgaard is probably not offended by Handke’s comparison for, like so many Norwegian writers, he reveres Dag Solstad. “His language,” writes Knausgaard in My Struggle, “sparkles with its new old-fashioned elegance, and radiates a unique luster, inimitable and full of elan.”.

  3. Apr 19, 2024 · Dag Solstad is a novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist, one of the most significant Norwegian writers to emerge during the 1960s. Solstad began his career as a writer of short experimental fictions that investigated the themes of identity and alienation: Spiraler (1965; “Spirals”) and

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  5. Dag Solstad (b. 1941) has written nearly thirty books, including Professor Andersen’s Night and Novel 11, Book 18 (forthcoming from New Directions). Admired worldwide by writers as diverse as Peter Handke and Karl Ove Knausgaard, Solstad has won the 2006 Brage Prize, the 1989 Nordic Council’s Prize for Literature, and the Norwegian Critics’ Prize in 1969, 1992, and 1999.

  6. Interview with Dag Solstad. According to some, Dag Solstad, who was born in Sandefjord in 1941, is Norway’s pre-eminent living novelist. From 1969’s Patina! Green! to The Insoluble Epic Element in Telemark over the Years 1592–1896, published in 2013 (both books remain untranslated into English), his reputation in Norway has not so much ...

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  7. Dag Solstad is one of the most recognized Norwegian writers of our time. His debut was in 1965 with the short story collection "Spiraler" (Spirals). His first novel, "Irr! Grønt!", was published four years later. His books have been translated into 30 different languages. He has won a number of awards, which include the Norwegian critics award ...

  8. Dag Solstad (born 1941) is one of Norway’s most prominent and influential living writers. Since debuting in the 1960’s, his authorship has comprised well over a dozen novels, several of which are considered classics in contemporary Norwegian literature.

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