Selma Lagerlöf(1858-1940)
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Lagerlöf made her debut in 1891 with The Gösta Berling saga, a story
about her own region, Värmland and her home, the country manor
Mårbacka. With her novel she starts the wave of romantic nationalist
literature in Sweden of the 1890s. Her novel Jerusalem (1901-02) is
about religious emigrants from Sweden to Palestine. She is the author
of Sweden's most read novel, The Adventures of Nils Holgerssons (1906),
a story about a boy traveling across Sweden on the back of a goose. Her
stories often evolve around folklore and supernatural events. One of
the peaks in her career was her novel The Emperor of Portugal (1914).
In 1907 she got a honorary degree at the University of Uppsala, in 1909
she got the Nobel Prize and 1914 she became a member of the Swedish
Academy. Her home Mårbacka is now a museum visited by thousands of
tourists every year.