Never too Late to Read Classics discussion

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Hunger
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2019 January Hunger by Knut Hamsun
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https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/c...
https://www.outsidersandmisfits.com/b...
https://www.theguardian.com/books/boo...
https://www.idunn.no/story-and-emotio...

Interesting article - I read the article in The Guardian. I didn't realize Hamsun's politics.
I read this book a few years ago and the impressions it left after reading are still in my mind after all this time.

Interesting article - I read the article in The Guardian. I didn't realize Hamsun's politics."
Well, always food for thought... how much are we influenced by what we know about the author when we read a book?

That is promising! I’m allways interested in that kind of reads.



I read Hunger this past year on my Journey Around the World in 80 Books. It is definitely a book that I marked High Impact. It won't be soon forgotten.
Brian, I like that... 'Dosty.' :) Believe it or not, you are the 1st I have heard use the short name form for him. That is much easier to say and write. I didn't find Notes as spectacular as his big novels though. My favorites are Devils/ Demons, The Brothers, and Crime and Punishment, in that order. I hope you enjoy reading Hunger. That is probably way different than anything I've read.

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Hunger's use of internal monologues is a forerunner of, not only existentialists, but also the stream of consciousness writings of Joyce, Woolf and Faulkner

I designate a nickname only for Russian authors that are ranked with the best of all time. That is only Dosty, not the others, regardless of a Nobel Prize.
However, since there are varying spellings, Gontsjarov needs some kind of nickname. While I should emulate Oblomov and never decide on one, I will instead designate him "The Gonch."

I am halfway through Hunger. I think it is extremely powerful. I will never again complain about having hunger.
And to be able to write like this! What a joy to read.

Hunger is a powerful portrayal of the thoughts of the unhinged starving would-be artist, though I can see how someone might find it tiresome. I especially admire how he portrays the artist's thoughts rationalizing or explaining his unusual reactions to others. I find Hamsun's writing to be superb.


I hope you enjoy the book as much as others and I did.
My library hold came in but I’m determined to finish one of the books I’ve already started before I start this one! I can probably start it by Friday.

The return of Knut Hamsun https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...

The return of Knut Hamsun https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/20..."
Thank you! I will put it in the message on top too.

I’m ~1/3 finished. I really like the writing but I feel a little frustrated with the character. If he would just put aside his pride...
The other frustrating part of the story to me is the lack of compassion by people. So far, only 1 person has helped him.
I finished it this afternoon and wound up really liking it! I read the translation by Sverre Lyngstad, which is not the one linked. I found the story really intriguing, all of the character's crazy thoughts and ramblings.

It is, but a lot of people were poor there. And maybe people felt it was his own fault? Or maybe he acted very strangely?
Glad you enjoyed it too!
I just read a comment in “The Friend” by Sigrid Nunez which made me wonder about the scene in Hunger where the MC is telling the lady that she lost a book. This comment didn’t make sense to me. In “The Friend”, the MC talks about “Balzac lamenting after a night of passion that he just lost a book...” Could this be a literary reference/joke? It’s such an odd comment by the MC, not that he wasn’t prone to making odd comments!

I've read 25 pages of Hunger (my translation is by Robert Bly...came from the library) and think this sums up the action so far: "I was conscious all the time that I was following mad whims without being able to do anything about it. My deranged consciousness ran away with me and sent me lunatic inspirations, which I obeyed one after the other."

But then again, that is just my idea, i might completely miss something important.


Haha, Brian... never seen them, but I can imagine them:-)

The writing is beautiful. The actions and emotions of the narrator make me want to laugh and cry at the same time--biting his own finger, his problems with the dog bone, making up his own word in the jail cell.

Saying I "enjoy" the book makes me feel a bit sadistic. However, I did say earlier that my read of it was "extremely enjoyable."
I think I'll just say it was a powerful, insightful and rewarding book and reading experience.
I forgot my Mystery book so started reading this on Cloud yesterday at lunch.
Barely in but its an eye awakening side of living with hunger and no job but also trying to help another.
Barely in but its an eye awakening side of living with hunger and no job but also trying to help another.

You're reading it while eating lunch? And I worried about my being sadistic.

Saying I "enjoy" the book makes me feel a bit sadistic. However, I did say earlier that my read of it was "extremely enjoyable."
I thi..."
Well, there is a difference in enjoying the reading and enjoying the content:-) Otherwise we can no longer enjoy a lot of books...

Barely in but its an eye awakening side of living with hunger and no job but also trying to help another."
True, Lesle. Hamsun shows his talent by describing it so ‘powerful’
Brian wrote: "Lesle wrote: "I forgot my Mystery book so started reading this on Cloud yesterday at lunch."
You're reading it while eating lunch? And I worried about my being sadistic."
Oh my! I didn't even think of that! Eating my lunch while he goes hungry :-(
You're reading it while eating lunch? And I worried about my being sadistic."
Oh my! I didn't even think of that! Eating my lunch while he goes hungry :-(

I'm not really being serious, Claire. I know that when we say we 'enjoy' a book or movie that depicts human suffering we aren't saying we enjoy the suffering; we are just enjoying the vivid insight into the human condition it gives us. If 'enjoy' means 'to take pleasure in' it is the pleasure of obtaining knowledge and insight into the human experience.

I'm not really being serious, Claire. I kn..."
Haha, Brian, I know. But you got me thinking:-)
His turmoil with God surprised me.
Passing the time with different thoughts, his pencil and now his shoes.
His anger at a man whom was believing his lies was totally uncalled for. His anger seems to be at everyone, does that stay with him always?
Yes and again, Im reading while at lunch :(
Passing the time with different thoughts, his pencil and now his shoes.
His anger at a man whom was believing his lies was totally uncalled for. His anger seems to be at everyone, does that stay with him always?
Yes and again, Im reading while at lunch :(

I thought the translation by Lyngstad was really well done – read a couple of chapters from the original Sult and then switched back to English.
This is by far one of the best books I’ve read in ages in the sense that however depressing the premise might be I’ve really enjoyed the novel – and however repulsive the narrator is at times, I can’t help but sympathise with him. In an odd way, he’s actually quite likeable.
This book should come with a warning for freelancers – read it at your own risk!
Books mentioned in this topic
Notes from Underground (other topics)Hunger (other topics)
Notes from Underground (other topics)
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One of the most important and controversial writers of the 20th century, Knut Hamsun made literary history with the publication in 1890 of this powerful, autobiographical novel recounting the abject poverty, hunger and despair of a young writer struggling to achieve self-discovery and its ultimate artistic expression. The book brilliantly probes the psychodynamics of alienation, obsession, and self-destruction, painting an unforgettable portrait of a man driven by forces beyond his control to the edge of the abyss. Hamsun influenced many of the major 20th-century writers who followed him, including Kafka, Joyce and Henry Miller. Required reading in world literature courses, the highly influential, landmark novel will also find a wide audience among lovers of books that probe the "unexplored crannies in the human soul" (George Egerton).
First published in 1890 by the (later) Noble Prize winner Knut Hamsun