Fiction / Scandinavian Literature


The Werewolf
Aksel Sandemose
Translated by Gustaf Lannestock
INTRODUCTION BY HARALD S. NAESS
Library of World Fiction




"The Werewolf . . . leaves you grasping at what is left of your shattered vision of normality."
—Gregg Olson, Harper's


A boldly drawn novel of the tyranny of love over men and women and the unending trials of strength between good and evil in human nature. Its main characters are of heroic stature yet deeply flawed, moving against the backdrop of Norwegian society from World War I to the 1960s.

Over the novel broods the symbol of the Werewolf, which for Sandemose represents all the forces hostile to a full, free life—the thirst for power over others' lives, the lust to destroy what cannot be possessed or controlled. In their private encounters with the Werewolf, few can claim total victory. Sandemose's characters all bear the scars of lost battles.

"In this, his greatest novel, Sandemose carried his fictional experimentation to a triumphant conclusion. . . . He handles the problems of fictional time as adeptly as such writers as James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. His sensitivity, his lyrical capacity . . . create a novel of beauty as well as truth."—Robert D. Spector, American-Scandinavian Review

Aksel Sandemose (1899–1965) was born in Denmark but won fame as a Norwegian writer. His novels include A Fugitive Crosses His Tracks and Horns for Our Adornment.


Back in Print
April 2002
394 pp.         
ISBN 0-299-03744-4  Paper $24.95 t


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