Most Beloved Sister

Most Beloved Sister (Swedish: Allrakäraste syster) is a 1949 children's book by the Swedish author Astrid Lindgren. It was originally included in the collection Nils Karlsson-Pyssling: sagor (OCLC 185229564), then re-released in 1973 with illustrations by Hans Arnold.

Most Beloved Sister
First standalone edition (1973)
AuthorAstrid Lindgren
Working titleAllrakäraste syster
Cover artistHans Arnold
CountrySweden
LanguageSwedish
Published1949
1973 (standalone edition)
PublisherRabén & Sjögren

Plot

The story revolves around seven-year-old Barbro, who has a secret twin sister called Ylva-li, the only person in Barbro's life who likes her more than anything else, and who calls her Most Beloved Sister. Ylva-li is the queen of the golden hall which can be reached by crawling down a hole under the rose bush, Salikon. Barbro and Ylva-Li ride their horses and have adventures together. When Barbro has to return to her parents, Ylva-Li tells her that she will die when the roses on Salikon wither. Barbro refuses to believe her and returns to her parents, who pretend that they have missed her. The next day, the roses on the rose bush are all dead, and there is no longer a hole in the ground.

Film

A short-film, directed by Göran Carmback, based on the book, was made in 1988.[1][2]

gollark: See those descriptive and convenient classes? `_3o_6`, etc?
gollark: A lovely sample of the nicely-formatted HTML.
gollark: ```<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>Dragon Cave - Viewing Egg - (bUNDN)</title><meta property="og:title" content="Egg: (bUNDN)"><meta property="og:url" content="https://dragcave.net/view/bUNDN"><meta property="og:image" content="https://dragcave.net/ogimage/bUNDN"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="//s.dcave.net/cache/css/a/a1hsdk.css" data-modules="webfont_fq,relicLayout,relicGlobal,relicHeader"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="//s.dcave.net/cache/css/c/ci6djn.css" data-modules="webfont_FontAwesome,uiIcon,dragonSummary,guestSiteDescription"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="//s.dcave.net/cache/css/4/4nabog.css" data-modules="commonGlobal"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="//s.dcave.net/cache/css/5/5bpt3q.css" data-modules="webfont_DCS"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="//s.dcave.net/cache/css/3/3tm5uf.css" data-modules="tooltip"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="//s.dcave.net/cache/css/9/9crlwr.css" data-modules="symbols"></head><body><div class="_3p_0"><div class="_3o_6"><h1 class="_3o_1"><a href="/?r=1"><img src="//s.dcave.net/cache/images/b/bvi5yh.png" alt="Dragon Cave"></a></h1><div class="_3o_3">Not logged in · <a href="/help/time" class="_3o_4"><span title="Night: Certain dragons are only available at night." class="_3g_3 _3h_0 _3h_2" id="210d36dfa9"></span> 4:28 am ED```
gollark: It is not, however, good for parsing HTML, but since TJ09 makes DC's HTML output very annoying (no convenient classes/IDs), you kind of have to use something like that.
gollark: Alternatively, downloading the HTML and parsing it via regex, but that's horrible.

References

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