The Nobel Prize in Literature goes to ... Jon Fosse
They've announced the winner of this year's Nobel Prize in Literature, and it is Jon Fosse. He receives the prize: "for his innovative plays and prose which give voice to the unsayable".
This isn't too unexpected -- he's been talked about as one of the top contenders for several years. (The first time I notedthat he was in the Nobel mix was in 2013; he was probably already one of the finalists back then.)
Several of his works are under review at the complete review: Dalkey Archive Press have brought out several of his works -- see here -- while Fitzcarraldo Editions have also picked him up and continue their incredible Nobel streak, and Transit Books published his Septology in the US (which I hope to finally get my hands on in full ...); Methuen have published a huge pile of his plays -- they're up to Plays Six ! -- see the full list.
See also the useful author page at the Winje Agency.
The useful bio-bibliography shows just how large his output is -- and well worth noting is that he has also translated a great deal (see under 'Other'), including the works of three previous laureates, Handke, Pinter, and Beckett.
Like Handke (another big translator) and Jelinek among recent laureates, Fosse is also widely considered a major playwright -- but, like Handke and Jelinek, it's his fiction rather than his plays that have gotten much more attention in the US. (Fosse also has a flat in Austria, where he apparently wrote most of Septology .....)
At the Booker Prize site you can learn What's on my bookshelf: Jon Fosse
Merve Emre profiled the author in a timely piece at The New Yorker less than a year ago, in Jon Fosse's Search for Peace, while at the Los Angeles review of Books Remo Verdickt and Emiel Roothooft had A Second, Silent Language: A Conversation with Jon Fosse last year. Going back a bit, at Music & Literature Cecilie Seiness had A Conversation with Jon Fosse in 2019.
At the Literary Hub, there's also Karl Ove Knausgaard on the Writing of Jon Fosse -- published "Just in Time for Nobel Season" (even if that was in 2019 ...).
At The Paris Review's The Daily Damion Searls wrote, nearly a decade ago, on translating Jon Fosse from Norwegian, in Pure Prose.
Not sure how helpful this sort of thing is, but for those wondering:
- Where to start ? A guide to Fosse's work. by Joumana Khatib and Tina Jordan at The New York Times
- Where to start with: Jon Fosse by Catherine Taylor at The Guardian
- With Jon Fosse's Win, the Nobel Prize in Literature Is So Back by Alex Shephard and Mark Krotov at The New Republic's Critical Mass (though I don't agree with the thesis; if anything, Fosse is a choice in almost every respect identical to Handke, minus the politics-on-the-side (and while "the Nobel was awarded to Olga Tokarczuk and Peter Handke" in 2019, it wasn't a shared one; Tokarczuk is the 2018 laureate, Handke the 2019 one)
- Jon Fosse wins the 2023 Nobel prize in literature by Ella Creamer at The Guardian
- Jon Fosse, Norwegian Author, Receives the Nobel Prize in Literature by Alex Marshall and Alexandra Alter at The New York Times
- Jon Fosse: the writer of silence, the AFP report
Nobel Prize reactions
Yesterday's post on Jon Fosse being named this year's Nobel Prize in Literature laureate covers the link-basics, but more pieces are sure to follow in the coming days, so I'll post a list here which I'll be updating as they do:
- Jon Fosse, the Nobel Prize, and the Art of What Can't Be Named by Merve Emre at The New Yorker
- Q & A with Transit Books' Adam and Ashley Levy by Anderson Tepper at The Los Angeles Times
- Author Jon Fosse wins the Nobel Prize in Literature for 2023 - the press release from Dalkey Archive Press
- How Nobel Prize-winning author Jon Fosse was found in translation at the the University of Rochester's Rochester Explains
- Jon Fosse Wins 2023 Nobel Prize in Literature by Sophia Stewart, with some publisher-reactions
- Jon Fosse's Books Seek and Find the Divine -- "an appraisal" by Randy Boyagoda at The New York Times
- Jon Fosse's Nobel prize announces his overdue arrival on the global stage by Philip Oltermann at The Guardian
- Jon Fosse en 20 livres by Léon Cattan at Livres Hebdo