
Produced by Matti Järvinen and Distributed Proofreaders Europe.
A vivid portrait of late‑nineteenth‑century Norwegian countryside unfolds in this lively collection of short stories. Written in the author's own regional tongue, the tales capture the rhythm of farm work, the chatter of market days and the quiet tensions that linger beneath simple rural customs. The narrator moves effortlessly between humor and tenderness, letting everyday scenes reveal deeper questions about class, faith and the yearning for a broader world.
Through sharply observed characters—a stubborn farmer, a curious school‑girl, a wandering free‑thinker—readers feel the pulse of a community on the brink of modernity. The prose balances lyrical description with a brisk, conversational edge, making the voices feel both authentic and immediate. As each story opens, it invites you to step into a moment of both struggle and hope, offering a glimpse of how ordinary lives can echo universal desires for freedom and understanding.
Language
fi
Duration
~4 hours (232K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-09-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1851–1924
A major Norwegian writer of the late 1800s, he helped show that Nynorsk could carry serious fiction, poetry, and ideas. His work often wrestles with faith, doubt, rural life, and the pressures of modern change.
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