The Road Leads On.

First Edition of Knut Hamsun's The Road Leads On; Inscribed by Him in the Year of Publication

The Road Leads On.

HAMSUN, Knut.

$4,500.00

Item Number: 122597

New York: Coward-McCann, 1934.

First American edition of the Nobel Prize-winning author’s final novel in his classic August Trilogy. Octavo, original cloth. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author in the year of publication on the front free endpaper, “B.A. Abel with greetings Knut Hamsun Norholm 11.8.34.” Near fine in a very good dust jacket. Jacket art by John Alan Maxwell. Translated from the Norwegian by Eugene Gay-Tifft. Books inscribed by Hamsun are rare.

August, who had to flee from Polden at the end of August (the second book in the trilogy), reappears fifteen years later in Segelfoss. He is now in his sixties, and he works for the town's largest merchant and eventually also consul, Gordon Tidemand, the son of Theodor at Bua (known from the books Children of the Age and Segelfoss Town). August is only referred to by the people of the town as Altmulig 'the Handyman', and his former desire to create development, change, and greatness seems to be gone. August is now a helper and indispensable handyman, who has apparently found his place under the consul's friendly hand. He grapples with religious musings and a hopeless infatuation with a young girl from a poor farmhouse. One day, Pauline, his wandering comrade Edevart's sister from Polden, comes to Segelfoss with a large sum of money, and August's uncontrollable urge to act is reawakened.

Add to cart Ask a Question SHIPPING & GUARANTEE