ORDERS

Readings Orders 0

DEMANDS

Readings Demands 0

Son Of Svea:a Tale Of the People's Home
[Paperback - 2022]
On Demand
Availability in 4-6 weeks on receipt of order
List Price: $16.99
Our Price: Rs.4095 Rs.3481
Standard Discount: 15%
You Save: Rs.614
Category: Fiction
Sub-category: Historical Fiction
Additional Category: Literary Fiction
Publisher: Other Press | ISBN: 9781635420043 | Pages: 288
Shipping Weight: .306 | Dimensions: 5.2 x .7 x 8 inches

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.
 

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 is a translator, literary scholar, and editor of the UK-based journal Swedish Book Review. Her translations from the Swedish include Ellen Mattson’s Snow, for which she won the Bernard Shaw Translation Prize. She lives and works in Kent, England.

Bestsellers in Fiction

View All