The extraordinary final volume of 'the most significant literary enterprise of our times' (Guardian)
Karl Ove Knausgaard (Author)
Karl Ove Knausgaard's My Struggle cycle has been heralded as a
masterpiece all over the world. From A Death in the Family to The
End, the novels move through childhood into adulthood and,
together, form an enthralling portrait of human life. Knausgaard
has been awarded the Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature, the
Brage Prize and the Jerusalem Prize. His work, which also includes
the Seasons Quartet and the Morning Star sequence (The Morning
Star, The Wolves of Eternity, The Third Realm and The School of
Night) is published in thirty-six languages.
Martin Aitken (Translator)
Martin Aitken's translations of Scandinavian fiction are widely
published. His work has appeared on the shortlists of the
International Booker Prize, the Dublin Literary Award and the US
National Book Awards, among other prizes. He received the PEN
America Translation Prize in 2019 and, for the first book in the
Morning Star cycle, the US National Translation Award in Prose in
2022. He lives in Denmark
For all its complexity, My Struggle achieves something pretty
simple, the thing that enduring fiction has always done: it creates
a world that absorbs you utterly… The End is alive.
*Sunday Times*
Knausgaard’s rendering of this crisis – the jitteriness, the
relentlessness with which he goes over events again and again, his
overwhelming sense of transgression and shame – is riveting… Every
changed nappy, every cigarette smoked on the balcony, every cup of
coffee poured from that damn vacuum jug is another alibi; the
creation of the normal life that distracts from the roiling mess
within... That we cannot quite name what we’ve experienced is part
of the brilliance.
*Guardian*
The End is woven of a man’s love for his family and his obsession
with the solitary writing life, the warp and weft of these
contradictory passions sometimes meshing together perfectly… My
Struggle is a cultural moment worth getting involved in. The six
volumes offer something special: total immersion in the soap opera
of another person’s life.
*The Times*
A uniquely compelling and absorbing reading experience… captivating
interplay between banality and beauty, the redundant and the
sublime.
*New Statesman*
Compulsively addictive… His way of describing “reality as it is” is
to expand the range of thoughts and actions, however mundane or
shameful, that a human being will publicly admit to.
*Daily Telegraph*
This central tension, between the needs of the artist and the need
of the husband and father, one that has coursed through My
Struggle’s thousands of pages, Knausgaard appears to bring to a
moving, wholly fitting resolution… its totality, its absolute
commitment to its own ideals, make it – and the whole sequence – a
mesmerising, thought-provoking and genuinely important work of
art.
*Spectator*
A daring end to a brilliant series... I will read this series again
and again.
*Evening Standard*
It is hard not to be impressed by the fluency and erudition on
display as Knausgaard charts his course through history,
philosophy, literature and the visual arts… In the end, reality
does not break down under Knausgaard’s gaze. We are left instead
with the world as it is: the click of a seatbelt, the shock of
melted margarine, the centuries slipping away in Rembrandt’s
eyes.
*Financial Times*
The inner conflicts swirling around exert a gravitational pull on
the reader, the challenges of empathy becoming universal through
their particularity. Over and over, he asserts something
fundamental to literature, art and life… these books will
endure.
*Independent*
My Struggle just keeps coming at you, much as life does… Knausgaard
succeeds in producing prose that is "alive", partly because of his
eye for detail and partly because of the quality of his
intellect.
*Economist*
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