The Ringmaster's Daughter

The Ringmaster's Daughter (Sirkusdirektørens datter in the original Norwegian) is a novel by Jostein Gaarder, published in 2001. It was originally written in Norwegian, but has since been translated into English (2002).

The Ringmaster's Daughter
AuthorJostein Gaarder
Original titleSirkusdirektørens datter
CountryNorway
LanguageNorwegian
Publication date
2001

Plot

The novel uses a frequent Gaarder device of telling a story within a story. It is narrated by a Norwegian named Petter, who recounts his life since childhood. Petter grows up with a single mother and had few friends, although he does possess an overly-imaginative mind. As an adult Petter sells ideas, stories, and plots to frustrated writers, and soon expands to include clients across Europe. In the meantime Petter meets and falls in love with a woman named Maria. Maria tells him that she is leaving for Stockholm and that they must never see each other again, but first asks Petter to father her child.

Eventually writers and members of the publishing industry become suspicious, and rumors spread of a "Spider" who sells ideas to everyone. At a publishing convention in Bologna, Petter is warned that his life may be in danger, so he takes the first flight out. Going into hiding, Petter arrives on the Amalfi Coast, where he falls in love with a woman named Beate. Both are initially secretive about their pasts, but as Petter begins to tell Beate some of his stories, Beate gets angry and disgusted, telling him that she will only see him once more on the following day. During the night Petter dawns on the realization that Beate must have heard the same stories from her mother, Maria, thereby making him Beate's father.

Editions

  • Gaarder, Jostein. The Ringmaster's Daughter. London: Orion Publishing Group, Limited, March 1, 2006. ISBN 0-7538-1700-4
gollark: Okay, this doesn't work EITHER, this is VERY HARD.
gollark: All counter updates are now passed off to some internal event queue thingy, so it is now the problem of *that*.
gollark: PRAISE THE ACTOR MODEL!
gollark: I have fixed it using the actor model!
gollark: I'm just going to add a hard cap of 20... somethings... executing at once.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.