The First Time (Innbundet)

Author:

Vigdis Hjorth

Norwegian title: Den første gangen
Author:
Binding: Innbundet
Year: 1999
Pages: 47
Publisher: Cappelen Damm
Språk: Bokmål
Originaltittel: Den første gangen
ISBN/EAN: 9788202182946
Overview Den første gangen

I was sixteen years old and mother was scared for me. I couldn't have a boyfriend, I wouldn't be able to have one, and therefore I wanted to so much.
When one is sixteen and has a boyfriend, you do it, you're a grown'up and no one can prevent it. How will I look after, how will it look on me?

To the top

More books by Vigdis Hjorth:

Author Vigdis Hjorth

Vigdis Hjorth (b. 1959) has over several decades been one of Norway’s most important authors. She published her debut in 1983 in form of the children’s book Pelle-Ragnar and the Yellow Building, for which she received the Norwegian Cultural Council’s Debut Prize. Since then, she has had a prolific and award-winning authorship, writing for both children and adults. She has won several awards in Norway and has been nominated twice for the Nordic Council Literature Prize so far, for Will and Testament (2016) and Is Mother Dead (2020).

Hjorth writes existential books about human conditions and life choices, and throws a sharp gaze at current topics in the contemporary time. With novels such as Long Live the Post Horn! (2012) she has made her mark as a fearless political author. Her big breakthrough came in 2016 with Will and Testament, which became an instant favourite among literature critics as well as a huge sales success. In this novel Hjorth writes about complicated family relationships, about violation and liberation in close relationships, and the right to own one’s own story. Will and Testament was nominated for the National Book Award and Millions Best Translated Book Award when it was published in the US and the UK in 2019. In 2022 Is Mother Dead came out in English, and it was longlisted for the 2023 International Booker Award. Hjorth’s novels have been translated into more than 30 languages.

To the top

Foreign rights