The debut novel of Swedish author Selma Lagerlf, "The Saga of Gsta Berling" was first published in 1891. It is the story of its titular character Gsta Berling, a deposed minister. Gsta Berling becomes one of the pensioners in the manor at Ekeby when he is saved by the Mistress of Ekeby from freezing to death. Set on the shores of Lake Fryken, Lake Lven in the story, in Vrmland, a historical province in Sweden, the novel employs elements of magic realism to project an exotic image of early 19th century Sweden. Described in the "Encyclopedia Americana" as a "prose epic of Swedish country life," "The Saga of Gsta Berling" remains to this day one of Lagerlf's most popular works and an undisputed classic of Swedish romanticism.
The debut novel of Swedish author Selma Lagerlf, "The Saga of Gsta Berling" was first published in 1891. It is the story of its titular character Gsta Berling, a deposed minister. Gsta Berling becomes one of the pensioners in the manor at Ekeby when he is saved by the Mistress of Ekeby from freezing to death. Set on the shores of Lake Fryken, Lake Lven in the story, in Vrmland, a historical province in Sweden, the novel employs elements of magic realism to project an exotic image of early 19th century Sweden. Described in the "Encyclopedia Americana" as a "prose epic of Swedish country life," "The Saga of Gsta Berling" remains to this day one of Lagerlf's most popular works and an undisputed classic of Swedish romanticism.