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Selma
Lagerlof (1858-1940) was born in Ostra Emterwik, Varmland, Sweden. She
was brought up on Marbacka, the family estate, which she did not leave
until 1881, when she went to a teachers' college at Stockholm. In 1885
she became a teacher at the girls' secondary school in Landskrona. She
had been writing poetry ever since she was a child, but she did not publish
anything until 1890, when a Swedish weekly gave her the first prize in
a literary competition and published excerpts from the book which was
to be her first, best, and most popular work. Gosta Berlings Saga was
published in 1891, but went unnoticed until its Danish translation received
wide critical acclaim and paved the way for the book's lasting success
in Sweden and elsewhere. In 1895 financial support from the royal family
and the Swedish Academy encouraged her to abandon teaching altogether.
She travelled in Italy and wrote Antikris mirakler (1897) [The Miracles
of Antichrist], a novel set in Sicily. After several minor works she published
Jerusalem (1901-1902) [The Holy City], a novel about Swedish peasants
who emigrated to the Holy Land and whom she had visited in 1900. This
work was her first immediate success. A book intended as a primer for
elementary schools became one of the most charming children's book in
any language: Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige (1906) [The
Wonderful Adventures of Nils].
None of her later
works matched the power or success of Gosta Berlings Saga. In the mid-twenties
she published the historical trilogy: Lowenskoldska Ringen (1925), Charlotte
Lowenskold (1927), and Anna Svard (1928) [The Ring of the Lowenskolds,
3 vols.]. She also published several volumes of reminiscences under the
title Marbacka (1922-32).
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967.
Selma Lagerlof died
in 1940.
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