February 26, 2004

Any List with Knut Hamsun On It's Fine By Me

The English Pen has launched The Bigger Read, an effort to trump the dumbed down Big Read contest held by the BBC. The BBC plans to rebut with The Biggest Read. One thing's for certain. This contest is going to involve more than a few testicles. (via Literary Saloon)

Posted by DrMabuse at February 26, 2004 11:24 AM
Comments

It's not available to be read online but James Wood's The Broken Estate has an excellent essay on Hamsun that sent me off in search of his work. (Actually, all the Wood essays are top-flight, but I am a fan.)

Posted by: TEV at February 26, 2004 05:09 PM

Start with "Hunger." It's one of the finest depictions of self-sacrifice and the downsides of sticking whole-heartedly to a universe of one. Particularly with the way that Hamsun captures the narrator's desperation and self-delusions.

And is this the Wood essay you're referring to?

http://www.laweekly.com/ink/02/24/wls-wood.php

If so, it's interesting that Wood puts "Hunger" in the same classically comical canon as Don Quixote. Hamsun's dark edge is fascinating in the way he paints the narrator's struggle as both absurd and all-too-tragic.

Posted by: Ed at February 27, 2004 04:26 AM

No, that's not the essay, although it hits some of the same marks. The essay in Broken Estate is New York Review of Books length - but it focuses on Hunger, which is on my shelf.

You can find lots of copies of B.E. on half.com - can't recommend it highly enough.

Posted by: TEV at February 27, 2004 10:59 AM