Karl Ove Knausgaard?s first novel, Out of the World, was the first ever debut novel to win the Norwegian Critics Prize and his second, A Time for Everything, was widely acclaimed. A Death in the Family, the first of the My Struggle cycle of novels, was awarded the prestigious Brage Prize. The My Struggle cycle has been heralded as a masterpiece all over the world.
This book gets to places that conventional art history has long been too sheepish to explore. -- Craig Brown * Mail on Sunday * Norway doesn't have a world-class philosopher (Kierkegaard was Danish). Karl Ove Knausgaard declared at the end of his previous book that he is no longer a writer, and it looks as though he's moving in to fill that space... A philosophical meditation on the nature of art and the self. -- Sue Prideaux * Spectator * An intriguing analysis exploring the many layers of artistic creation... Intellectually rewarding, philosophically engaging, and written in a gripping narrative voice that is sincere, authoritative, and authentic, Knausgaard's book subtly teaches the reader, in almost mystical and theological terms, about the positive spiritual value of art. -- JP O'Malley * Irish Times * So Much Longing in So Little Space - which has its roots in an exhibition that Knausgaard curated at Oslo's Munch Museum in 2017 - succeeds on its own terms as a searching, shrewd and jargon-free interpretation of the artist's art and life. Knausgaard writes clearly and candidly, as a fellow-pilgrim partnering the reader through Munch's inner landscape rather than a preacher or teacher. Ingvild Burkey's fine translation carries that unpretentious intimacy into English with total assurance. -- Boyd Tonkin * The Arts Desk * Although a fine primer on Norwegian painter Edvard Munch, this book is more about the experience of wandering into the world of art and being consumed by its confluence of history, narrative, and sublimity... Fans of the author's acclaimed autobiographical novels will find this book to be of Rosetta Stone-like importance as he delves into Munch's exploration of memory and how the artist rendered the past in a way that still feels both intimate and universally relatable . . . An immersive, impassioned history that illuminates both subject and author. * Kirkus *