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Book Cover for: Paradise Reclaimed, Halldor Laxness

Paradise Reclaimed

Halldor Laxness

From the Nobel Prize winner comes a captivating novel about an idealistic Icelandic farmer who journeys to Mormon Utah and back in search of paradise. - "Full of an earthy poetry...a style wonderfully wise and entirely Scandinavian in its combination of magic and reality." --The New York Times Book Review - With an introduction by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Thousand Acres.

The quixotic hero of this long-lost classic is Steinar of Hlidar, a generous but very poor man who lives peacefully on a tiny farm in nineteenth-century Iceland with his wife and two adoring young children. But when he impulsively offers his children's beloved pure-white pony to the visiting King of Denmark, he sets in motion a chain of disastrous events that leaves his family in ruins and himself at the other end of the earth, optimistically building a home for them among the devout polygamists in the Promised Land of Utah. By the time the broken family is reunited, Laxness has spun his trademark blend of compassion and comically brutal satire into a moving and spellbinding enchantment, composed equally of elements of fable and folkore and of the most humble truths.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Vintage
  • Publish Date: Apr 2nd, 2002
  • Pages: 320
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.41in - 5.97in - 0.68in - 0.75lb
  • EAN: 9780375727580
  • Categories: LiteraryHistorical - GeneralSatire

About the Author

HALLDOR LAXNESS was born in Iceland in 1902. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1955 and died in 1998.

Praise for this book

"Laxness has genuine magic as a novelist." --New York Herald Tribune

"Full of an earthy poetry...a style wonderfully wise and entirely Scandinavian in its combination of magic and reality." --The New York Times Book Review

"The qualities of the sagas pervade his writing, and particularly a kind of humor--oblique, stylized and childlike--that can be found in no other contemporary writer." --The Atlantic