Edvard Hoem

Edvard Hoem

Photo: Jarle Vines
Born March 10, 1949 (1949-03-10) (age 63)
Oslo,  Norway
Occupation Author, novelist, essayist
Nationality Norwegian
Genres Fiction, plays, essays

Edvard Hoem (born 1949) is a Norwegian novelist, dramatist, lyricist and psalmist. He made his literary debut in 1969, with the poetry collection Som grønne musikantar. He was awarded the Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature in 1974 for the novel Kjærleikens ferjereiser. He was awarded the Melsom Prize in 2006,[1] and the Peter Dass Prize in 2007 for the novel Mors og fars historie. He received the Ibsen Prize in 2008 for the play Mikal Hetles siste ord.

Several of his books (Kjærleikens ferjereiser (1974), Prøvetid (1984), Ave Eva (1987), Mors og fars historie (2005)) have been nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize, but did not win this award.[1]

Hoem was the director of the Molde theater Teatret Vårt 1997–1999. He has translated nine of Shakespeare's plays into Norwegian.

Contents

Bibliography

Translations

Edvard Hoem's most famous retranslations (Year of translation in brackets).

Awards

External links

References