November 2024
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    21 Comments

    1. Pangloss_ex_machina on

      The Nobel Prize in Literature 2023 was awarded to Jon Fosse

      > “for his innovative plays and prose which give voice to the unsayable”.

    2. JoyousDiversion on

      Seems to try his hand at everything. Fair play to him for winning but I’d never heard of him.

    3. Pangloss_ex_machina on

      I really thought that Mircea Cărtărescu would win this year.

      Still rooting for Michel Houellebecq though.

    4. One of those rare times I have actually read something by the winner. His trilogy of novellas is very good.

    5. Honestly, after reading the first part of Septology I’m not terribly surprised. It was a very unique book and terribly gripping

    6. I’m very pleased with this win! I discovered Fosse earlier this year and his writing style, with long sentences and repetitions, completely suck you into the book. I found *Melancholy I-II* especially to be a very intense and memorable read. Can’t wait to start in his *Septology*!

    7. RandomMusings-5044 on

      Very happy with this win.
      I have read three works by Fosse:
      Aliss At The Fire, Trilogy and Septology.
      I recommend all three but Septology is his magnum opus and a very special reading experience in my opinion.

    8. Krasznahorkai robbed. Ive been hoping he’d win for the last couple years. Maybe with the release of next years book, he’ll win

    9. Wonderful-Main-5669 on

      He may be my most significant living author, alongside DeLillo and Krasznahorkai. I ploughed through all of his English translated novels/novellas last year and I fell in love. His works shook me out of a literary funk/slump I had been experiencing, reminding me of what literature is capable of. He is a true author of the unconscious. An extraordinary writer.

    10. Borges, Celine, Chekhov, Fitzgerald, Fosse, Graham Greene, Ibsen, James Joyce, D. H. Lawrence, Henry Miller, Maugham, Murakami, Nabokov, Orwell, Proust, Rushdie, Strindberg, Tolstoy, Twain, H. G. Wells …

      One of these won a Nobel Prize!

    11. Septology is far more engaging and accessible than I predicted it would be. Best book I’ve read all year.

    12. His work sounds extremely Christian… Am I missing something about Fosse that would interest me as a very non-Christian person?

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