<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>New edition of J.S. Scott's 1924 English translation of Children of the Age (original title: Børn av Tiden) by Knut Hamsun, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1920.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>New edition of J.S. Scott's 1924 English translation of <em>Children of the Age</em> (original title: <em>Børn av Tiden</em>) by Knut Hamsun, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1920.<br /> <br /> Hamsun described it as "a novel about the war between the aristocrat and the peasant." <em>The Encyclopedia of the Novel</em> (2014) called it "a historically based--and utterly scathing--critique of modernity." And the Hamsun Centre (Hamsunsenteret) website wrote: "In <em>Children of the Age</em> a family's rise and fall are used to describe the decline and fall of a whole epoch. Thematically the novel has similarities to Thomas Mann's <em>Buddenbrooks </em>(1901), with Hamsun's humour being the stylistic difference between the two."<br /> <br /> <em>Children of the Age</em> was a commercial success when it was first published in Norway in 1913. Isaac Anderson, writing in <em>The Literary Digest International Book Review</em> (1924), described it as "Hamsun's art at its best," and, while concluding that was "not so great a novel as <em>Growth of the Soil</em>," it had the same epic quality, and "deserves, and undoubtedly will have, a high place among the novels of our time."<br /> <br /> This new edition is not simply a scan of the original. It has been completely reformatted and redesigned. Spelling errors and other typos that appeared in the original Alfred A. Knopf edition have been corrected.</p>
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