The Sorrow Gondola Explained

The Sorrow Gondola
Author:Tomas Tranströmer
Title Orig:Sorgegondolen
Translator:Robin Fulton
Country:Sweden
Language:Swedish
Publisher:Albert Bonniers förlag
Pub Date:1996
English Pub Date:1997
Pages:37
Isbn:9100562327

The Sorrow Gondola (Swedish: '''Sorgegondolen''') is a 1996 poetry collection by the Swedish writer Tomas Tranströmer. The title refers to the composition La lugubre gondola by Franz Liszt. It was the first collection by Tranströmer published after his 1990 stroke. It received the August Prize.[1]

Reception

The book was reviewed in Publishers Weekly, where the critic wrote that while the author's stroke is never mentioned explicitly, the collection "centers unmistakably on the controlled anguish that the 66-year-old poet's physical condition--and encroaching mortality--imposes." The review continued: "What saves the collection from morbidness is the formal beauty and remorselessly compressed clarity of the writing. Indeed, the almost telegraphic brevity of the poems is the volume's only concession to Transtromer's handicap. With the exception of the four-page title poem, a meditation on Wagner's final months, most of the pieces are only a few stanzas long, yet they retain all the force of the poet's earlier work."[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alla Nominerade. Swedish. augustpriset.se. Swedish Publishers' Association. 2012-04-23. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120310093355/http://augustpriset.se/tidigare-ar/alla-nominerade. 2012-03-10.
  2. Web site: Staff writer. 1997-09-01. Fiction Review: The Sorrow Gondola by Tomas Transtromer. Publishers Weekly. 2012-04-23.