A World Gone Mad: The Wartime Diaries

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A World Gone Mad: The Wartime Diaries Page 19

by Astrid Lindgren


  Mannerheim, Carl Gustaf (1867–1951), supreme commander of the Finnish army 1939–46 and president of Finland 1944–1946

  Marie José of Belgium (1906–2001), married Umberto II of Italy, queen of Italy briefly in 1946

  Märtha of Norway (1901–54), crown princess of Norway and princess of Sweden, married Olav V of Norway in 1929

  Matte, see Viridén, Margareta

  Maugham, W. Somerset (1874–1965), British writer

  Maurois, André (1885–1967), French writer

  Medin, Elisabeth, mother of Florence Shanke who was a colleague of Astrid Lindgren at the censor’s office

  Michael I of Romania (1921–), king of Romania 1927–30 and 1940–47

  Mistral, Gabriela (1889–1957), pseudonym of Lucila Godoy y Alcayaga, Chilean poet and educator, awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1945

  Molander, Linnéa, home help to the Lindgren family 1939–50

  Molin, Aina, no information available

  Möller, Olle (1906–1983), Swedish sportsman and potato seller who was convicted of two notorious murders, despite his denial of the charges

  Molotov, Vyacheslav (1890–1986), foreign minister of the Soviet Union 1939–49 and 1953–56

  Mörne, Håkan (1900–1961), Finland-Swedish writer

  Mother, see Lindgren, Karolina

  Mum, see Ericsson, Hanna

  Munk, Kaj (1898–1944), Danish dramatist and clergyman, murdered by the Gestapo

  Mussolini, Benito (1883–1945), Fascist dictator of Italy 1922–43

  Nilsson, Rut, probably a colleague of Astrid Lindgren at the censor’s office

  Nirsch, presumably a colleague of Astrid Lindgren at the censor’s office, no further information available

  Norwid, Stefan Tadeusz (1902–76), pseudonym of Polish writer Tadeusz Nowacki

  Nyberg, (Miss), presumably friend of Alice and Per Viridén, no further information available

  Nygaardsvold, Johan (1879–1952), Norwegian Social Democrat politician, prime minister 1935–45, led the government in exile from London, 1940–45

  Nygren, (Miss), no information available

  Nyman, Karin (1934–), née Lindgren, Astrid Lindgren’s daughter

  Olav V of Norway (1903–91), king of Norway 1957–91, crown prince during the Second World War

  Oliv, Elsa-Lena (1934–), née Gullander, childhood friend of Astrid’s daughter Karin, Elsa Gullander’s daughter

  Olson, Erik Vilhelm (‘Eveo’) (1891–1970), Swedish writer, journalist and director

  Oterdahl, Jeanna (1879–1965), Swedish writer and teacher

  Ottander, doctor who treated Astrid Lindgren’s daughter Karin, no further information available

  Øverland, Arnulf (1889–1968), Norwegian writer and lyric poet

  Paasikivi, Juho Kusti (1870–1956), Finnish politician and diplomat, ambassador to Sweden 1936–40, to Moscow 1940 –41, prime minister 1944–46, president 1946–56

  Palmgren (Mr and Mrs), presumably friends of Alice and Per Viridén and acquainted with the Lindgrens through them, no further information available

  Paul of Yugoslavia (1893–1976), cousin of Peter II, ruled as regent 1934–1941, until Peter was declared of age

  Per-Martin, see Hamberg, Per-Martin

  Pétain, Philippe (1856–1951), French head of state 1940–44 under the Vichy regime

  Peter, see Viridén, Peter

  Peter II of Yugoslavia (1923–1970), king of Yugoslavia 1934–45

  Quisling, Vidkun (1887–1945), Norwegian politician and founder of the fascist Nasjonal Samling (National Unity Party), Norwegian minister president 1942–45 under German occupation

  Remarque, Erich Maria (1898–1970), German writer

  Reynaud, Paul (1878–1966), French politician, president of the Council of Ministers for three months in 1940

  Ribbentrop, Joachim von (1893–1946), German foreign minister 1938–45

  Rommel, Erwin (1891–1944), army general, commander of Germany’s Afrika Korps

  Roosevelt, Franklin D. (1882–1945), US president 1933–45

  Rosén, no information available

  Rudling, Arvid (1899–1984), lawyer in whose office Astrid Lindgren worked as a shorthand typist

  Runström, Gunvor (1934–), née Ericsson, Astrid Lindgren’s niece, her brother’s daughter

  Rut, see Nilsson, Rut

  Rydick, presumably a colleague of Astrid Lindgren at the censor’s office, no further information available

  Ryti, Risto (1889–1956), president of Finland 1940–44

  Samuel August, see Ericsson, Samuel August

  Sandemose, Aksel (1899–1965), Danish-Norwegian writer

  Sandler, Rickard (1884–1964), Swedish Social Democrat politician, prime minister 1925–26 and foreign minister 1932–36 and 1936–39

  Segerfelt, childhood friend of Astrid Lindgren’s son Lars, no further information available

  Selassie I, Haile (1892–1975), emperor of Ethiopia 1930 –74

  Shanke, Florence (‘Flory’) (1918–), née Medin, colleague of Astrid Lindgren at the censor’s office

  Sibylla of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1908–72), Swedish princess, wife of hereditary prince Gustaf Adolf

  Sigge, see Gullander, Nils Emil Sigurd

  Sillanpää, Frans Eemil (1888–1964), Finnish writer, awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature 1939

  Silfverstolpe, Gunnar Mascoll (1893–1942), Swedish poet, translator and critic

  Simeon II (1937–), king of Bulgaria 1943–46

  Skyllerstedt, presumably a colleague of Astrid Lindgren at the censor’s office, no further information available

  Stäckig, Göran (1926–2007), childhood friend of Lars Lindgren

  Stäckig, Signe Elisabeth (1899–1974), née Lundström, mother of Göran Stäckig

  Stalin, Joseph (1878–1953), secretary general of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 1922–52, after the death of Lenin in practice assumed power over the country as a dictator, also formally head of government from 1941

  Stauning, Thorvald (1873–1942), Danish Social Democrat politician, prime minister 1924–26 and 1929–42

  Stellan, see Fries, Stellan

  Stevens, John (‘Esse’) (1925–2007), Lars Lindgren’s foster brother for the first three years of Lars’s life, when he was cared for by the Stevens family in Copenhagen

  Stina, see Hergin, Stina

  Stolpe, Sven (1905–96), Swedish writer, journalist and literary critic Streicher, Julius (1885–1946), German Nazi politician

  Strindlund, Gerhard (1890–1957), Swedish politician, member of Bondeförbundet (the Farmers’ League), minister of social affairs 1936 and communication minister 1938 –39

  Sture, see Lindgren, Sture

  Svensson, Johan Petter (‘Lucke’), ‘Vimmerby’s toughest old boy’, according to the local paper Vimmerby Tidning

  Taina, presumably an evacuated Finnish war child, staying with Elsa Gullander

  Tanner, Väinö (1881–1966), Finnish Social Democrat politician, finance minister 1937–1939, foreign minister 1939–40 and minister for trade and industry 1940–42

  Tedder, Arthur (1890–1967), senior British air force commander

  Terboven, Josef (1898–1945), German Nazi politician, Reichskommissar for Norway during its occupation 1940–45

  Tjerneld, Staffan (1910–89), Swedish journalist and writer

  Truman, Harry S. (1884–1972), American Democratic politician, US vice president 1945 and, following the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, president 1945–53

  Umberto II of Italy (1904–1983), king of Italy briefly in 1946

  Victor Emmanuel III (1869–1947), king of Italy 1900–46

  Viridén, Alice (‘Alli’) (1904–2003), close friend of Astrid Lindgren and one of the young mothers who used to meet in Vasa Park

  Viridén, Margareta (‘Matte’) (1934–), childhood friend of Astrid’s daughter Karin and daughter of Alice Viridén

  Viridén, Per (‘Pelle’) (1902-86), married to Alice Viridénr />
  Viridén, Peter, son of Alice Viridén

  Virtanen, Rauno, presumably a Finnish acquaintance of Astrid’s brother Gunnar Ericsson, who was involved in Swedish aid to Finland

  Wendt, Georg von (1876–1954), Finnish medical research scientist and politician

  Wenner-Gren, Axel (1881–1961), Swedish business leader and financier

  Wickman, Johannes (1882–1957), Swedish publicist, foreign affairs editor of Dagens Nyheter 1918–48

  Wickstrøm, Rolf (1912–1941), Norwegian trade unionist, put to death by the Quisling regime

  Wikberg, Greta, no information available

  Wilhelm II of Germany (1859–1941), German emperor and king of Prussia 1888–1918 and subsequently lived in the Netherlands

  Wilhelmina of the Netherlands (1880–1962), queen of the Netherlands 1890–1948

  Willkie, Wendell (1892–1944), American Republican politician, presidential candidate and challenger of Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1940 election

  Wrede af Elimä, Brita Anna (1894–1973), writer and film producer

  Wuolijoki, Hella (1886–1954), Estonian-born Finnish writer

  Wuori, Eero (1900–66), Finnish Social Democrat politician and cabinet minister

  Zetterström, Erik (1904–97), Swedish comic writer and columnist who sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Kar de Mumma

  Zweig, Stefan (1881–1942), Austrian writer

  PUSHKIN PRESS

  Pushkin Press was founded in 1997, and publishes novels, essays, memoirs, children’s books—everything from timeless classics to the urgent and contemporary.

  Our books represent exciting, high-quality writing from around the world: we publish some of the twentieth century’s most widely acclaimed, brilliant authors such as Stefan Zweig, Marcel Aymé, Teffi, Antal Szerb, Gaito Gazdanov and Yasushi Inoue, as well as compelling and award-winning contemporary writers, including Andrés Neuman, Edith Pearlman, Eka Kurniawan and Ayelet Gundar-Goshen.

  Pushkin Press publishes the world’s best stories, to be read and read again. Here are just some of the titles from our long and varied list. To discover more, visit www.pushkinpress.com.

  THE SPECTRE OF ALEXANDER WOLF

  GAITO GAZDANOV

  ‘A mesmerising work of literature’ Antony Beevor

  SUMMER BEFORE THE DARK

  VOLKER WEIDERMANN

  ‘For such a slim book to convey with such poignancy the extinction of a generation of “Great Europeans” is a triumph’ Sunday Telegraph

  MESSAGES FROM A LOST WORLD

  STEFAN ZWEIG

  ‘At a time of monetary crisis and political disorder... Zweig’s celebration of the brotherhood of peoples reminds us that there is another way’ The Nation

  BINOCULAR VISION

  EDITH PEARLMAN

  ‘A genius of the short story’ Mark Lawson, Guardian

  IN THE BEGINNING WAS THE SEA

  TOMÁS GONZÁLEZ

  ‘Smoothly intriguing narrative, with its touches of sinister, Patricia Highsmith-like menace’ Irish Times

  BEWARE OF PITY

  STEFAN ZWEIG

  ‘Zweig’s fictional masterpiece’ Guardian

  THE ENCOUNTER

  PETRU POPESCU

  ‘A book that suggests new ways of looking at the world and our place within it’ Sunday Telegraph

  WAKE UP, SIR!

  JONATHAN AMES

  ‘The novel is extremely funny but it is also sad and poignant, and almost incredibly clever’ Guardian

  THE WORLD OF YESTERDAY

  STEFAN ZWEIG

  ‘The World of Yesterday is one of the greatest memoirs of the twentieth century, as perfect in its evocation of the world Zweig loved, as it is in its portrayal of how that world was destroyed’ David Hare

  WAKING LIONS

  AYELET GUNDAR-GOSHEN

  ‘A literary thriller that is used as a vehicle to explore big moral issues. I loved everything about it’ Daily Mail

  BONITA AVENUE

  PETER BUWALDA

  ‘One wild ride: a swirling helix of a family saga... a new writer as toe-curling as early Roth, as roomy as Franzen and as caustic as Houellebecq’ Sunday Telegraph

  JOURNEY BY MOONLIGHT

  ANTAL SZERB

  ‘Just divine... makes you imagine the author has had private access to your own soul’ Nicholas Lezard, Guardian

  BEFORE THE FEAST

  SAŠA STANIŠIĆ

  ‘Exceptional... cleverly done, and so mesmerising from the off... thought-provoking and energetic’ Big Issue

  A SIMPLE STORY

  LEILA GUERRIERO

  ‘An epic of noble proportions... [Guerriero] is a mistress of the telling phrase or the revealing detail’ Spectator

  FORTUNES OF FRANCE

  ROBERT MERLE

  1 The Brethren

  2 City of Wisdom and Blood

  3 Heretic Dawn

  ‘Swashbuckling historical fiction’ Guardian

  TRAVELLER OF THE CENTURY

  ANDRES NEUMAN

  ‘A beautiful, accomplished novel: as ambitious as it is generous, as moving as it is smart’ Juan Gabriel Vásquez, Guardian

  ONE NIGHT, MARKOVITCH

  AYELET GUNDAR-GOSHEN

  ‘Wry, ironically tinged and poignant... this is a fable for the twenty-first century’ Sunday Telegraph

  KARATE CHOP & MINNA NEEDS REHEARSAL SPACE

  DORTHE NORS

  ‘Unique in form and effect... Nors has found a novel way of getting into the human heart’ Guardian

  RED LOVE: THE STORY OF AN EAST GERMAN FAMILY

  MAXIM LEO

  ‘Beautiful and supremely touching... an unbearably poignant description of a world that no longer exists’ Sunday Telegraph

  SONG FOR AN APPROACHING STORM

  PETER FRÖBERG IDLING

  ‘Beautifully evocative... a must-read novel’ Daily Mail

  THE RABBIT BACK LITERATURE SOCIETY

  PASI ILMARI JÄÄSKELÄINEN

  ‘Wonderfully knotty... a very grown-up fantasy masquerading as quirky fable. Unexpected, thrilling and absurd’ Sunday Telegraph

  STAMMERED SONGBOOK: A MOTHER’S BOOK OF HOURS

  ERWIN MORTIER

  ‘Mortier has a poet’s eye for vibrant detail and prose to match... If this is a book of fragmentation, it is also a son’s moving tribute’ Observer

  BARCELONA SHADOWS

  MARC PASTOR

  ‘As gruesome as it is gripping... the writing is extraordinarily vivid... Highly recommended’ Independent

  THE LIBRARIAN

  MIKHAIL ELIZAROV

  ‘A romping good tale... Pretty sensational’ Big Issue

  WHILE THE GODS WERE SLEEPING

  ERWIN MORTIER

  ‘A monumental, phenomenal book’ De Morgen

  BUTTERFLIES IN NOVEMBER

  AUÐUR AVA ÓLAFSDÓTTIR

  ‘A funny, moving and occasionally bizarre exploration of life’s upheavals and reversals’ Financial Times

  BY BLOOD

  ELLEN ULLMAN

  ‘Delicious and intriguing’ Daily Telegraph

  THE LAST DAY

  LAURENT SEKSIK

  ‘Mesmerising... Seksik’s portrait of Zweig’s final months is dignified and tender’ Financial Times

  TALKING TO OURSELVES

  ANDRES NEUMAN

  ‘This is writing of a quality rarely encountered... when you read Neuman’s beautiful novel, you realise a very high bar has been set’ Guardian

 

 

 
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