This week, we're welcoming historical fiction author Julie K. Rose, whose sophomore novel, OLEANNA, is set in Norway and America during the early 20th century. Julie is here to talk about the book and give away a copy. Here's the blurb:
Set during the separation of Norway from Sweden in 1905, this richly detailed novel of love and loss was inspired by the life of the author's great-great-aunts.
Oleanna and her sister Elisabeth are the last of their family working their farm deep in the western fjordland. A new century has begun, and the world outside is changing, but in the Sunnfjord their world is as small and secluded as the verdant banks of a high mountain lake. With their parents dead and their brothers all gone to America, the sisters have resigned themselves to a simple life tied to the land and to the ghosts of those who have departed.
The arrival of Anders, a cotter living just across the farm's border, unsettles Oleanna's peaceful but isolated existence. Sharing a common bond of loneliness and grief, Anders stirs within her the wildness and wanderlust she has worked so hard to tame. When she is confronted with another crippling loss, Oleanna must decide once and for all how to face her past, claim her future, and find her place in a wide new world.
Oleanna was short-listed in the 2011 Faulkner-Wisdom novel competition, and will be available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, IndieBound, and other online retailers in late January.
Q&A with Julie K. Rose
Why did you choose Norway as a setting
for your book?
Norway has always been a subject of
fascination to me. It is a place of incredible natural beauty: it is both wild
and serene, majestic and bucolic. It has a (popular) history of wildness and
adventure, and a present of social justice and peace.
As far back as I can remember, my mother
instilled in me a great pride in our Norwegian heritage. Three of my four
grandparents were Norwegian, two of them first-generation Americans. I was
raised with syttende mai and Norwegian flags on the Christmas tree, stories of
my mom's visit to Norway in the 1960s, Viking ships on the mantelpiece, plates
decorated with rosemaling, Elisabeth and Oleanna's weavings on my dresser, and my great-grandmother's bunad in my closet.
In 2004, I was lucky enough to visit
Norway. The place, the people, and the history were incredibly inspiring, and
in 2006 I began writing Oleanna, not
only as a love letter to the country, but to fill a gap. Beyond Sigrid Undset*,
there haven't been very many historical authors who have tackled Norway, which
is a crying shame. It's an incredible country with a rich history.
*If you love historical fiction, get your
hands on the Kristin Lavransdatter
trilogy right away. Set in 13th century Norway, Undset received the
Nobel Prize in Literature for the books in 1928.
What was the significance of this
timeframe?
It was an interesting time for Norway. The glory days of Harald Fairhair and St. Olaf
had been buried (but not forgotten) while they spent 500 years under the thumb
of first Denmark, and then Sweden (to whom the country had been given as a
spoil of war in 1814). While the country enjoyed some freedoms, by 1905 the
Norwegian parliament (the Storthing) and the people decided they wanted full
freedom. In a complicated series of laws and proclamations, Norway declared
itself independent on June 7, which was confirmed by a popular referendum in
August, in which 99.95% of voters agreed to become fully independent once again.
You mention that the story was inspired
by your great-great-aunts. Was there a specific event that inspired the book?
I'd always wondered what precipitated my
great-grandfather's emigration to America, and what happened to the sisters he
left behind.
Elisabeth and Oleanna were my
great-great-aunts who lived at Myklebost on the banks of lake Jølster. They
were both weavers of some acclaim and significant skill, and the family story
is that a number of their weavings are on display in the Folk Museum in Oslo.
As far as I have been able to tell, neither one married, or if they did, those tales
were lost by the time my mother visited them in the early 1960s.
I've always wondered about these women,
who carried on living on the farm after everyone had died or left for America.
What were their stories? What were their lives like? Who did they love? The
genealogical record does not indicate much, but not everything is revealed by a
countrywide census or a parish's records. I tried to imagine what life would
have been like in an isolated place like western Norway, when everyone they
loved had left, and the world outside was changing. What kinds of choices would
they have made?
Elisabeth and Oleanna's brother John is
based on my great-grandfather, Johann Tollefson Myklebust, who emigrated to the
United States in 1902 and was one of the first homesteaders of Ramsay County,
North Dakota. He married Ingeborg Briesnes of Aurland (Sogn, Norway) and lived
in Starkweather, ND until his death at the age of 97 in 1978.
This book seems to be a departure from
your previous novel, The Pilgrim Glass.
Yes, in a sense. The Pilgrim Glass was a contemporary novel which included large doses of 12th century French history. Oleanna is an historical novel focusing
on early 20th century Norway. There are a lot of similarities,
however. Both books explore the role of place in shaping history, and in
shaping culture, and consider location an integral character in the story.
Where can I learn more about Norway and
this historical period?
Some of my favorite resources focus on
the every day life of Norwegians, including
Norwegian Folk Art:
The Migration of a Tradition, Abbeville Press
(1995); The Woven Coverlets of Norway,
by Katherine Larson (U of Washington Press) (2001); and Remedies and Rituals: Folk Medicine in Norway
and the New Land, by Kathleen Stokker, Minnesota Historical
Society Press, 2007.
I'd also
recommend A
History of Modern Norway, 1814-1972, by TK Derry (Clarendon Press) (1973),
the Sogn og Fjordane fylke (county) cultural website (http://sognogfjordane.kulturnett.no), and the Norway Heritage website (http://www.norwayheritage.com/).
Where can I learn more about Oleanna?
http://oleannanovel.com
http://oleannanovel.tumblr.com
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13254652-oleanna
http://oleannanovel.com
http://oleannanovel.tumblr.com
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13254652-oleanna
Thank you, Julie, and best of luck with Oleanna.Visitors, please leave your comment for a chance to win a copy of this novel.