Aimée Sommerfelt | |
Birth Name: | Nicoline Aimée Dedichen |
Birth Date: | 2 April 1892 |
Birth Place: | Oslo, Norway |
Death Date: | 7 August 1975 |
Death Place: | Oslo, Norway[1] |
Nationality: | Norwegian |
Genre: | children's books, young adult fiction |
Notableworks: | The Road to Agra |
Spouse: | Alf Sommerfelt |
Relatives: | Henrik Arnold Thaulow Dedichen (father) Antoinette Pauline Marie Nyblin (mother) |
Awards: | Jane Addams Children's Book Award, Josette Frank Award |
Aimée Sommerfelt (née Dedichen; 8 April 1892 - 7 August 1975)[2] [3] was a Norwegian writer of numerous children's books and young adult novels.
She was born as Nicoline Aimée Dedichen, the daughter of a psychiatrist, Henrik Arnold Thaulow Dedichen (not to be confused with the writer Henrik Arnold Thaulow Wergeland, his maternal grandfather's first cousin) and Antoinette Pauline Marie "Toinon" Nyblin (1861–1941) .[3] [4]
She was most famous for her 1959 work The Road to Agra. In 1961, it became her first book to be published in the United States, being translated into English by Evelyn Ramsden. Her books usually highlighted issues of social justice. They placed child protagonists in extremely difficult circumstances, such as poverty and wartime.
She married linguist Alf Sommerfelt.
She became blind late in her life.[3]
For The Road to Agra, Sommerfelt won the Jane Addams Children's Book Award and the Josette Frank Award.