Research Catalog

Another world

Title
Another world / Jan Myrdal ; translated by Alan Bernstein.
Author
Myrdal, Jan.
Publication
Chicago, IL : Ravenswood Books, 1994.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance PT9876.23.Y7 Z46313 1994Off-site

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Details

Description
204 pages; 23 cm
Summary
  • Sweden's leading writer recreates the look and feel of New York in 1938, seen through the eyes of an eleven-year old who is changing worlds. The stunning fidelity to the language, fantasies and realities of childhood won this book Sweden's Grand Prize for the Novel and the Esselte Prize for Literature for its sequel, Twelve Going on Thirteen.
  • Myrdal's three autobiographical novels about childhood began as scandals for their unflattering picture of his Nobel Prize-winning parents, Gunnar and Alva Myrdal, but were later hailed as classics of Swedish literature, celebrated for their recreation of the inner world of childhood.
  • In Another World, Gunnar comes to America to "solve the Negro problem," but Jan leaves Sweden to become an American. He is eleven years old and struggling to leave behind the humiliations of childhood, as he grapples with the language, manners and realities of a strange new culture and the adult world.
  • Jan walks the streets of New York. He goes to the World's Fair and drinks ice cream sodas. He knows all there is to know about volcanos and steam engines. He reads Creepy Stories and Kropotkin's The French Revolution, listens to the radio, and sneaks looks at that picture of the girl in Alice in Wonderland, her dress billowing up as she falls down the rabbit hole. He goes to an experimental school for the children of intellectuals and world leaders.
  • He reads his mother's psychology books to defend himself against the prying questions of the school psychologist. Jan is tough. No longer so easily hurt, he knows how to be somewhere else when Gunnar is talking to him, and he knows what to expect from his mother.
  • But most of all he listens and watches. We see New York and America on the eve of World War II, how the progressive intellectuals of the Thirties thought and lived, and how they looked to a boy unimpressed by their pretensions. Like all children, he is attuned to the hypocrisies and strange ways of adults.
  • "No one outside the family knows what our family is really like. I could not even tell my paternal grandmother. She wouldn't want to know. She would just tell me I shouldn't pay any attention to it, and that Alva and Gunnar were like that, and they didn't mean anything by it. But I know that Gunnar realiy does. One mustn't say anything or mention it to outsiders. I can't talk about it with anyone. Ever."
Uniform Title
Annan värld. English
Alternative Title
Annan värld.
Subject
  • Myrdal, Jan > Childhood and youth
  • Authors, Swedish > 20th century > Biography
LCCN
93041239
OCLC
  • 29256191
  • ocm29256191
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries