Eystein Eggen
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Eystein Eggen (5 January 1944 in Oslo – 19 November 2010) was a Norwegian writer.[1] Eggen was from a family with several other contemporary Norwegian writers.
Eggen made his debut with a book about the life and death of general Carl Gustav Fleischer, the Norwegian commander in chief at Narvik 1940. He also wrote a portrait of the writer Agnar Mykle, his father-in-law. Eggen wrote novels with topics from medieval Norway. In 1993 Eggen published The boy from Gimle—the autobiographical story of a Norwegian childhood in a Nazi milieu. As a consequence, two years later the Norwegian war children got an official excuse.[citation needed] Eggen became a State Scholar in 2003. "He is a symbol of an entire generation", the spokesman for the Norwegian Labour Party said in parliament.
Eggen's father was the Norwegian editor-in-chief of the Leitheft's Norse version during World War II.
References
- ^ "Eystein Eggen". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 25 November 2010.
External links
- Norwegian Government on Eggen (in English)
- Stortinget: Møte fredag den 14. December kl. 10 2001 (in Norwegian)
- An interview with Eggen
- CS1 Norwegian-language sources (no)
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- 1944 births
- 2010 deaths
- People from Tolga, Norway
- Writers from Oslo
- Norwegian World War II memoirists
- 20th-century Norwegian novelists
- 21st-century Norwegian novelists