Karl Ove Knausgaard (Author) Karl Ove Knausgaard?s first novel, Out of the World, was the first ever debut novel to win the Norwegian Critics Prize and his second, A Time for Everything, was widely acclaimed. A Death in the Family, the first of the My Struggle cycle of novels, was awarded the prestigious Brage Prize. The My Struggle cycle has been heralded as a masterpiece all over the world.Martin Aitken (Translator) Martin Aitken has lived in Denmark for nearly 30 years. He is the acclaimed translator of numerous novels, including work by Peter H eg, Jussi Adler-Olsen and Pia Juul, and has translated many short stories and poems. In 2012 he was awarded the American-Scandinavian Foundation?s Nadia Christensen Translation Prize.
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. -- Theo Tait * 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. -- Alex Clark * 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. -- Melissa Katsoulis * The Times * A uniquely compelling and absorbing reading experience... captivating interplay between banality and beauty, the redundant and the sublime. -- Chris Power * 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. -- Jake Kerridge * Daily Telegraph *