Writer, born near Boden, NE Sweden. After minimal schooling, and a number of years in mainly manual occupations, he spent most of the 1920s in Paris and Berlin, and began to write. His four-part Romanen om Olof (19347, The Story of Olof) is the finest of the many working-class autobiographical novels written in Sweden in the 1930s. He was much involved in anti-Nazi causes, and produced a number of novels, especially the Krilon series (19413), castigating totalitarianism. The same humanitarian values are evident in his later historical novels, particularly Strändernas svall (1946, trans Return to Ithaca), and Hans nådes tid (1960, trans The Days of his Grace). He shared the 1974 Nobel Prize for Literature with his fellow Swede, Harry Martinson.
Eyvind Johnson, (July 29, 1900 – August 25, 1976) was a Swedish author. He became a member of the Swedish Academy in 1957 and shared the Nobel Prize in Literature with Harry Martinson in 1974 with the citation
for a narrative art, far-seeing in lands and ages, in the service of freedom.The choice for Eyvind Johnson and Harry Martinson in 1974 was controversial as both were on the Nobel panel themselves and Graham Greene, Saul Bellow and Vladimir Nabokov were the favoured candidates that year.
Johnson was born in Näsberg village, Edefors parish Boden, Norrbotten.
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