Pelle Erobreren 1: Barndom by Martin Andersen Nexø
"Pelle Erobreren 1: Barndom" by Martin Andersen Nexø is a novel written in the early 20th century. The story follows the Swedish boy Pelle and his aging father Lasse as they land on Bornholm to find work, entering the harsh hierarchy of a great farm. Through sober, empathetic social realism, it traces Pelle’s childhood amid poverty, toil, and stubborn hope. Expect a coming‑of‑age framed by working‑class struggle and the pull of dignity.
The opening of the novel first states the author’s intent: a four‑volume portrait of the proletarian’s battles, following Pelle from childhood through apprenticeship and awakening. The narrative then shifts to a foggy May Day harbor where locals await a steamer of Swedish laborers; after tense banter and mounting anxiety, the ship arrives. Among the migrants are Lasse Karlsson and his young son Pelle, recently bereaved and nearly broke; spurned by several farmers who won’t hire a pair, Lasse is taken as cowman at the powerful Stengaarden, the boy allowed to follow for food. At the farm, an oppressive atmosphere—its predatory history, superstition, a woman’s constant weeping, and the smooth yet elusive master Kongstrup set against his bitter wife—frames the newcomers’ first days. Brief, vivid scenes show animals, Sunday bustle, chores, and Pelle’s errands and fears, hinting at class tensions while marking the boy’s early stirrings of pride, curiosity, and resolve. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net. This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive.
Reading Level
Reading ease score: 89.2 (6th grade). Easy to read.