Karl Ove Knausgaard, Knausgaard also spelled Knausgård, (born December 6, 1968, Oslo, Norway), Norwegian writer whose six-volume autobiographical novel, Min kamp (2009–11; My Struggle, 2012–18), proved to be a runaway best seller in Norway and also captivated a large and growing number of English-language readers. Some considered him the greatest Norwegian writer since playwright Henrik Ibsen. His deliberately prolix and minutely detailed style drew comparison to that of French novelist Marcel Proust in the seven-volume novel À la recherche du temps perdu (1913–27; In Search of Lost Time).
Knausgaard was the second child of an English teacher and a nurse, and he grew up on the island of Tromøy and in Kristiansand, both in southern Norway. When he was a teenager, his parents divorced, and his father, an alcoholic, moved in with his own mother and ultimately drank himself to death. His father was, as Knausgaard revealed in the first volume of his autobiography, a brutal and demanding man who humiliated and belittled his son, and their relationship essentially formed the author’s sense of himself. Knausgaard graduated from the University of Bergen.
Few would have predicted Knausgaard’s fame, but his first novel, Ute av verden (1998; “Out of the World”), was masterfully written and became the first debut novel to win the Norwegian Critics’ Prize. The novel, structured in three parts, told the story of a 30-something teacher who falls in love with one of his 13-year-old students. Knausgaard’s second book, Tid for alt (2004; U.K. title A Time to Every Purpose Under Heaven, also published as A Time for Everything), was considerably stranger and more complex.
After the publication of that book, Knausgaard, by his own account, began to be bored by fiction, particularly the presentation of life as a neat package carefully organized. Further, he was haunted by his past and wished to be free of his personal demons. With his first marriage, to journalist Tonje Aursland, broken and feeling an increasing sense of existential nausea, he moved to Stockholm. There he married Swedish writer Linda Boström. He further determined not only to tell the story of his own life—without hiding behind a character’s persona—but also to examine it in excruciating detail in an attempt “to find meaning in an ordinary life.” All this he began to do, using the real names of the people in his life and writing his thoughts uncensored, alternating between essayistic meditations and examinations of the minutiae of child rearing and other domestic activities.
When the first volume of Min kamp—sometimes titled in English A Death in the Family—was published in Norway, his father’s family threatened him with a lawsuit for his scandalous depiction of his father and grandmother. Yet his readership exploded. Publication of the second volume, whose English-language subtitle was A Man in Love, included a frank discussion of his marriage and sent his second wife into a psychological tailspin. By the time the third volume, subtitled Boyhood (or, in the U.K., Boyhood Island), was translated and published in 2014, many readers had become hopelessly hooked, caught in its brooding and revelatory rhythms. The English translations of the fourth and fifth volumes were released with the titles Dancing in the Dark (2015) and Some Rain Must Fall (2016), respectively. The final volume was published in English in 2018 with no additional title.
Knausgaard’s other books included Morgenstjernen (2020; The Morning Star), a horror-infused novel focusing on nine people who, following the foreboding appearance of a new star in the sky, contend with various problems. The sequel, Ulvene fra evighetens skog (“The Wolves from the Forest of Eternity”), appeared in 2021. He also wrote such nonfiction works as Så mye lengsel på så liten flate: en bok om Edvard Munchs bilder (2017; So Much Longing in So Little Space: The Art of Edvard Munch).
Courtesy - Kathleen Kuiper
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
- Karl Ove Knausgaard