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Hans Christian Andersen by Jackie Wullschlager
Hans Christian Andersen by Jackie Wullschlager







Hans Christian Andersen by Jackie Wullschlager

Her evocation of his world-Golden Age Copenhagen, the princely courts of Germany and the country villas of the Danish aristocracy, the languid warmth of southern Italy, which released his creativity-is unforgettable. Jackie Wullschlager has returned to all the original sources in Danish and German, and has followed Andersen’s footsteps across Europe. A signal achievement of Wullschlager’s account is to show with great clarity how Andersen’s art-darker and more diverse than previously recognized-emerged directly from the complexities of his life. Lonely, sexually confused, vain, anxious and hypochondriacal, Andersen was driven by ambitions that, despite the power and brilliance of his work, prevented his ever being satisfied. But if his rise was astonishing, it was rarely happy.

Hans Christian Andersen by Jackie Wullschlager

Born the son of a dirt-poor cobbler and an illiterate washerwoman in a provincial Danish city, he indeed fought his way to fame in spite of his circumstances. In this groundbreaking biography, the first serious and comprehensive study of Andersen and his work to be undertaken in English, Jackie Wullschlager brings out the true nature of his life. Yet the image of Andersen that has come down to us-that of the amiable, childlike storyteller-is bitterly at odds with the reality. By the time he reached middle age in the 1840s, in fact, he was probably the most famous writer in Europe, on familiar terms with kings and princes and eagerly read by a huge audience. The universal familiarity of such stories as “The Ugly Duckling,” “The Little Mermaid” and “The Emperor’s New Clothes” shows how successful he was. Others before him collected and retold folk stories and fairy tales, but Hans Christian Andersen was the first to create them himself.









Hans Christian Andersen by Jackie Wullschlager