Saturday, January 27, 2018

THE WREATH




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The Wreath, Sigrid Undset, Penguin Classic, 2005 (originally published in 1920, translated from the Norwegian by Tina Nunnally, 1997) 291 pp
 
 
The Wreath, written by 1928 Nobel Prize winner Sigrid Undset, was published in Norway in 1920. It is the first of a trilogy called Kristin Lavransdatter, set in 14th century Norway. I read it for my Tiny Book Club. First translated into English by Charles Archer in 1923, a new translation by Tina Nunnally published in 1997 is now considered a much improved rendering of the book into English.
 
I liked The Wreath but I did not love it. Kristin herself is one of literature's great bad women. She had been betrothed by her father to a man who would bring land, wealth and stability into the family, as was the custom in the 14th century. Before the marriage can take place, Kristin falls passionately in love with a fallen knight, Erlend Nikulausson. They consummate their passion when a young Kristin is spending a year in a convent, supposedly to calm her down before her marriage. By the time she manages to convince her family to release her from the betrothal and allow her to marry Erlend, she is secretly pregnant.

The Wreath introduces the wild and beautiful world of Norway at that time. When the story opens Kristin is seven and goes on her first journey outside the valley where she was born. She adores her father and he her. Lavrans Bjorgulfson and his wife Ragnfrid had lost child after child, leaving Ragnfrid permanently depressed. When Kristin came along and managed to live, Lavrans became besotted with his daughter but Ragnfrid could never dare to give her love to another child she might lose.

Hard as it is to imagine being a daughter in such an almost primitive culture, the author makes sure you experience all of it. I kept thinking of Heidi while I read. Also Hild by Nicola Griffith. Religion plays a huge role with Christianity and ancient pagan beliefs competing daily in the lives of these people.

Despite all of it entrancing elements, I was not wholly won over. Even after discussing the book with my book club members. The Middle Ages comprise 1000 years of not one thing good for women. Compared to then we have indeed come a long way. The only thing easier for a woman then was to become a fallen one and the repercussions were dire in the extreme.

Sigrid Undset certainly brings to life all the subjection but she also has a rather too obvious mission that included ideas such as passion trumps all and women are people too. Kristin suffers unbelievably in this tale though she does finally marry her true love. I was not completely convinced by this character. It is so clear that marriage to Erlend is only going to bring her more suffering that I do not feel at all compelled to read the second book in the trilogy, The Wife.
 
If I had read The Wreath back in the 1980s when I first read The Mists of Avalon, I think I would have loved it and gone on to finish the trilogy. Sometimes, timing is everything. I have to credit Sigrid Undset for taking on a subject that before 1920 had mostly always been written about by men in Western Europe.
 
 
(The Nunnally translation of The Wreath is available in paperback by order from Once Upon A Time Bookstore.)

9 comments:

  1. Too bad it wasn't more to you. I have Norwegian relatives & Swedish friends so would like to eventually read the trilogy but now will temper my expectations, which is okay -- that sometimes helps. Timing is a good point -- about feelings on books.

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    1. And I have read and loved some Norwegian fiction. Yes, I think a lot of it was the timing.

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  2. Too bad you weren’t taken with the main character or the themes in the novel; at least you crossed it out from your reading list.

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    1. Yes. You know I might have been pushing it, reading two Nobel Prize winning authors in a row-:)

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    2. That could be it. Sometimes one transfers expectations from book to book. I know I do it sometimes, particularly after reading an excellent book the next tends to be a downer unless it is really, really awesome.

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  3. Once again you have introduced me to a book and an author with whom I was unfamiliar. I generally enjoy books set in Norway. Something about the landscape there... This one sounds a bit problematic though.

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    1. The landscape gets me every time. Its problems were, I think, a combination of translated literature written almost a century ago and set many centuries earlier. But also an interesting comparison on how that period is written about now compared to earlier.

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  4. I read all three books in this trilogy a few years ago, but I do understand why you don't feel compelled to continue. I can tell you that there is definitely a lot more suffering ahead for Kristin in the next two books!

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    1. Thanks for your understanding Helen!

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