A Shining — WINNER OF THE 2023 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE - Jon Fosse - E-Book

A Shining — WINNER OF THE 2023 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE E-Book

Jon Fosse

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Beschreibung

A man starts driving without knowing where he is going. He alternates between turning right and left, and finally he gets stuck at the end of a forest road. Soon it gets dark and starts to snow, but instead of going back to find help, he ventures, foolishly, into the dark forest. Inevitably, the man gets lost, and as he grows cold and tired, he encounters a glowing being amid the obscurity. Strange, haunting and dreamlike, A Shining is the latest work of fiction by Jon Fosse, 'the Beckett of the twenty-first century' (Le Monde).

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‘Jon Fosse is a major European writer.’

— Karl Ove Knausgaard, author of My Struggle

 

‘The Beckett of the twenty-first century.’

— Le Monde

 

‘Fosse has been compared to Ibsen and to Beckett, and it is easy to see his work as Ibsen stripped down to its emotional essentials. But it is much more. For one thing, it has a fierce poetic simplicity.’

— New York Times

 

‘Jon Fosse has managed, like few others, to carve out a literary form of his own.’

— Nordic Council Literature Prize

 

Praise for Septology

 

‘A deeply moving experience. At times while reading the first two books of Septology, I walked around in a fugue-like state, wondering what it was that I was reading, exactly. A parable? A gospel? A novel bereft of the usual markings of plot, time, and character? The answer appeared to be all of the above, but although I usually balk at anything mystical, the effect was haunting and cumulative … I hesitate to compare the experience of reading these works to the act of meditation. But that is the closest I can come to describing how something in the critical self is shed in the process of reading Fosse, only to be replaced by something more primal. A mood. An atmosphere. The sound of words moving on a page.’

— Ruth Margalit, New York Review of Books

 

‘Fosse’s fusing of the commonplace and the existential, together with his dramatic forays into the past, make for a relentlessly consuming work: Septology feels momentous.’

— Catherine Taylor, Guardian

 

‘With Septology, Fosse has found a new approach to writing fiction, different from what he has written before and – it is strange to say, as the novel enters its fifth century – different from what has been written before. Septology feels new.’

— Wyatt Mason, Harper’s

 

‘Having read the Norwegian writer Jon Fosse’s “Septology”, an extraordinary seven-novel sequence about an old man’s recursive reckoning with the braided realities of God, art, identity, family life and human life itself, I’ve come into awe and reverence myself for idiosyncratic forms of immense metaphysical fortitude.’

— Randy Boyagoda, New York Times

 

‘[P]alpable in this book is the way that the writing is meant to replicate the pulse and repetitive phrasing of liturgical prayer. Asle is a Catholic convert and, in Damion Searls’s liquid translation, his thoughts are rendered in long run-on sentences whose metronomic cadences conjure the intake and outtake of breath, or the reflexive motions of fingers telling a rosary. These unique books ask you to engage with the senses rather than the mind, and their aim is to bring about the momentary dissolution of the self.’

— Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal

 

‘The translation by Damion Searls is deserving of special recognition. His rendering of this remarkable single run-on sentence over three volumes is flawless. The rhythms, the shifts in pace, the nuances in tone are all conveyed with masterful understatement. The Septology series is among the highlights of my reading life.’

— Rónán Hession, Irish Times

 

‘Fosse intuitively — and with great artistry — conveys … a sense of wonder at the unfathomable miracle of life, even in its bleakest and loneliest moments.’

— Bryan Karetnyk, Financial Times

 

‘The entire septet seems to take place in a state of limbo…. Though Fosse has largely done away with punctuation altogether, opting instead for sudden line breaks, his dense, sinuous prose is never convoluted, and its effect is mesmerizing.’

— Johanna Elster Hanson, TLS

 

‘Fosse has written a strange mystical Moebius strip of a novel, in which an artist struggles with faith and loneliness, and watches himself, or versions of himself, fall away into the lower depths. The social world seems distant and foggy in this profound, existential narrative.’

— Hari Kunzru, author of White Tears

 

‘Septology is the only novel I have read that has made me believe in the reality of the divine, as the fourteenth-century theologian Meister Eckhart, whom Fosse has read intently, describes it: “It is in darkness that one finds the light, so when we are in sorrow, then this light is nearest of all to us.” None of the comparisons to other writers seem right. Bernhard? Too aggressive. Beckett? Too controlling. Ibsen? “He is the most destructive writer I know,” Fosse claims. “I feel that there’s a kind of – I don’t know if it’s a good English word – but a kind of reconciliation in my writing. Or, to use the Catholic or Christian word, peace.”’

— Merve Emre, New Yorker

 

‘It ties 2666 by Roberto Bolaño as my favourite book from the twenty-first century… What I read was nothing less than a desperate prayer made radiant by sudden spikes of ecstatic beauty.’

— Lauren Groff, Literary Hub

A SHINING

JON FOSSE

Translated by DAMION SEARLS

Contents

Title PageA ShiningAbout the AuthorsCopyright