Gudmundur G. Hagalín

Icelandic writer
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Also known as: Gudmundur Gíslason Hagalín
Quick Facts
In full:
Gudmundur Gíslason Hagalín
Born:
October 10, 1898, Arnarfjördur, Iceland
Died:
February 26, 1985, Akranes
Also Known As:
Gudmundur Gíslason Hagalín

Gudmundur G. Hagalín (born October 10, 1898, Arnarfjördur, Iceland—died February 26, 1985, Akranes) was an Icelandic novelist, short-story writer, and essayist. His works constitute a social history of Iceland from World War I to the post-World War II period.

Hagalín was born in northwestern Iceland, where men live by fishing in wild weather and farming the half-barren land. As a young man he worked on the fishing boats and read widely. At 18 he went to the Latin School in Reykjavík but left after a year. He disliked “having learning stuffed into him like hay into a sack.” He turned to journalism and spent three years in Norway, traveling and lecturing on Iceland. In 1927 he returned to Iceland, settling in Ísafjördur, where he wrote and worked as a librarian for many years.

The rough and forthright men and women who lived around him were Hagalín’s personae. Inevitably, he developed a strong prose style to interpret them. He reflected their language—typified by local colour—in the language of his characters. Many of his short stories are models of narrative economy, and most scholars consider these to be his major achievement. In his novels the characters in their natural setting dictate the action. Hagalín was one of the first Icelanders to write fictional biographies based on real people (though the form had its ancestry in the sagas). One deals with the life and adventures of a shark fisherman; another portrays the career of a ship’s master. They are not only good stories but documents of a passing generation.

Hagalín’s best-known novels include Kristrún í Hamravík (1933; “Kristrún in Hamravík”), Sturla í Vogum (1938; “Sturla in Vogum”), and Módir Ísland (1945; “Mother Iceland”). His autobiographical works include Ég veit ekki betur (1951; “I Know No Better”) and Hér er kominn Hoffinn (1954; “Here Comes Hoffinn”).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.