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First published in 1926, "Sons of the Old Country" is a lively, fast-moving novel about Norwegian immigrants who worked in the lumber mills of Wisconsin before and during the Civil War. Readers will be reminded of the pioneer sagas of Ager's countryman, Ole E. Rolvaag. These early immigrants are a vigorous, likable, hard-working lot. In summer they work in the sawmills; in winter, the logging camps. They brawl, make love, read the Scriptures, tell yarns, and struggle always to form a community. They came to America for highly individual reasons, and their integration into a new society is hastened by the Civil War. The "sons" fight on the Union side; some are imprisoned at Andersonville.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Waldemar Ager (1869-1941) edited a Norwegian newspaper in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, near the locale of his novel. "Sons of the Old Country" was translated by his son, Trygve M. Ager. The foreward by Odd S. Lovoll discusses Ager's place in Norwegian-American literature.
Zusammenfassung
The Norwegian immigrants are a vigorous, likable, hard-working lot. In summer they work in the sawmills; in winter, the logging camps. They brawl, make love, read the Scriptures, tell yarns, and struggle to form a community. This novel explains about these immigrants, who worked in the lumber mills of Wisconsin before and during the Civil War.