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Olav Audunssøn

II. Providence

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

The second volume in the Nobel Prize–winning writer's epic of medieval Norway, finely capturing Undset's fluid, natural style in a new English translation, the first in nearly a century
As Norway moves into the fourteenth century, the kingdom continues to be racked by political turmoil and bloody family vendettas that serve as the backdrop for Sigrid Undset's masterful story about Olav Audunssøn and Ingunn Steinfinnsdatter. Betrothed as children and raised as foster siblings, their unbridled love for each other sets in motion a series of dire events—with a legacy of betrayal, murder, and disgrace that will echo for generations. In Providence, the second of Olav Audunssøn's four volumes, Olav settles in at his ancestral estate of Hestviken and soon brings Ingunn home as his wife. Both hope to put their troubles behind them as they start a new life together, but the crimes and shameful secrets of the past have a long reach and a tenacious hold. The consequences of sin, suspicion, and familial obligations may prove a greater threat to the pair's happiness than even their long years of separation.

Set in a time when royalty and religion vie for power, and bloodlines and loyalties are effectively law, Providence summons a powerful picture of Northern life in the medieval era, as the Swedish Academy noted in awarding Undset the Nobel Prize. Conveying both the intimate drama of Olav and Ingunn's marriage and the epic sweep of their story, it is at once a moving and vivid recreation of a vanished world tainted by bloodshed and haunted by sin and retribution.

As with her classic Kristin Lavransdatter, Sigrid Undset immersed herself in legal, religious, and historical writings to create in Olav Audunssøn an astoundingly authentic and compelling portrait of Norwegian life in the Middle Ages. And as in her translation of Kristin Lavransdatter, Tiina Nunnally does full justice to Undset's fluid prose. Undset's writing style is by turns straightforward and delicately lyrical, conveying the natural world, the complex culture, and the fraught emotional territory against which Olav's story inexorably unfolds.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 28, 2020
      This sweeping epic of 13th-century Norway by Nobel winner Undset (1882–1949), the first in a tetralogy, sets a love story against the country’s upheaval. The bonds of kinship supersede the laws of church and state in Undset’s story, which begins with the betrothal of two children, Olav Audunsson and Ingunn Steinfinssdatter, aged seven and six. After Olav’s father, Audun Ingolfssøn, dies from an illness, Olav is raised by Steinfinn Toressøn on the remote mountain estate of Frettastein, where Olav becomes Ingunn’s foster brother and is expected to marry Ingunn when the children come of age. As young adults, Olav and Ingunn fall in love, only to learn that the dying Steinfinn is no longer in a position to protect the agreement he made with Audun. When the new masters of Frettastein refuse Olav’s suit for Ingunn, the young couple escape to seek protection from a bishop, setting in motion a series of dramatic events. Modern readers may chafe at the characterization of Ingunn as weak and “in need of the protection and support of men,” but Undset brings the setting to life with rich descriptions of the natural world, well-captured in Nunnally’s stunning translation. Those interested in Norse history will appreciate this modern classic of Norwegian literature.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 29, 2022
      The engrossing third volume of Nobel Prize winner Undset’s tetralogy of medieval Norway concludes the story of Norwegian chieftain Olav Audunssøn. Undset opens with the arrival of two men who invite Olav to captain their boat to England. Olav is grieving the loss of his wife, Ingunn, and decides to leave his estate. Their oldest son, Eirik, is heartbroken when Olav leaves him left behind, and the two men become estranged. In England, Olav faces a spiritual crisis and considers abandoning his estate and family. When he ultimately returns to Norway, he resigns himself to a quiet life. But when war breaks out, Olav’s spirit is renewed by a restored sense of purpose as he helps raise the countryside’s people against invaders. Though the many scenes of bloody battles and intense Christian soul-searching might turn away some readers, Undset keeps up a steady supply of beautiful descriptions of the land and sea, which Nunnally crisply conveys: “Ice still glistened and glittered along the slope of the fields facing north”; “from the wharf rose the strong springtime smell of the sea and tar and fish and water-soaked wood.” Fans of well-researched historical epics ought to check this out. (Oct.)
      Correction: An earlier version of this review incorrectly stated this book was the final entry in a tetralogy.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from August 15, 2021
      The second volume in Undset's tetralogy finds its eponymous hero battling one enemy and one moral quandary after another. The time is the 1300s, when Norway's king declares that his people are no longer to go out raiding as Vikings but instead are to settle down into peaceable occupations: "Men were supposed to believe, whether they liked it or not, that God would not tolerate anyone plundering a fellow Christian, even if he happened to be a foreigner." Ask a Viking to make nice, though, and you've got a problem on your hands. Olav, having been an outlaw raider after killing a member of his betrothed's family, now tries to settle down with Ingunn Steinfinnsdatter on his ancestral estate east of Oslo Fjord. It's not an easy transition. Olav is on his way to being a good Christian, but even so the Viking is strong in him: "He was...aware that he was supposed to show remorse because the murder was considered a sin, even though he couldn't understand why it was so sinful," writes Undset of his original sin (but not his first killing, and not his last). In the second volume of the four devoted to Olav, we find him constantly wrestling with a conscience newly awakened by conversations with learned priests--all Catholic, naturally, considering the time, a matter that brought controversy to Undset when the novel was published in officially Lutheran Norway in 1925. He also wrestles with the presence of the son his wife bore to another man, whom Olav also killed; the boy is a constant reminder of her infidelity, even as one child after another of Olav's is stillborn or dies soon after birth. Ingunn weakens and ages while Olav remains handsome and strong, though riven by doubt. A bonus in the story: As the volume winds to an end, Olav meets a kind fellow named Lavrans Bj�rgulfss�n, who, readers may recall, is the father of the protagonist of Undset's best-known novel, Kristin Lavransdatter. Shrouded in sorrow and Scandinavian gloom and a central part of a masterwork of modernist literature.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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