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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A short work of art
The only think I regret in "Pan" is that it ends so quickly. A true masterpiece, with love and nature touching everything. A hymn to life, to the North, to women and to the men who are strong enough to leave the path set by society and leave the life they want. How could anyone write so well? In Norwegian must be even better, although this could be hardly...
Published on March 12, 1998

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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Difficult read
I personally preferred his other works much more. Pan seemed to be really hard to read. It has some really beautiful prose with lyrical descriptions of the forests, but even though its a very short novel, I couldn't finish it.'Mysteries', 'Growth of the soil', 'wayfarers' and 'Hunger' were much better !
Published on March 27, 2003 by Tara Chklovski


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A short work of art, March 12, 1998
By A Customer
The only think I regret in "Pan" is that it ends so quickly. A true masterpiece, with love and nature touching everything. A hymn to life, to the North, to women and to the men who are strong enough to leave the path set by society and leave the life they want. How could anyone write so well? In Norwegian must be even better, although this could be hardly believed!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent exploration of masculine weakness, January 20, 1998
By 
I greatly admired Hamsun's ability to make me taste his chief character's latent self-concept when it is dragged to the surface(and through the mud?) by interest in, competition for, a capricious woman. His spare writing style gave only enough detail to prompt my brain to fill in the emotions from my own reservoir and squirm with unhappy recognition. Wouldn't we all love to think that we are best described by our affections for and from our dog?
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5.0 out of 5 stars Take care to proclaim that the great god Pan is dead, December 22, 2008
I can only wish I were clever enough to absorb the full depth of this surprising novel in one reading. Instead, I look forward to revisiting this short work again, to see if my initial impressions hold up or change over time.

The Nobel Prize winning Norwegian author Knut Hamsum published Pan in 1894, though I only found that out after I'd finished. As I was reading it, it had felt as though it belonged to the early to middle part of the 20th century. Regardless, its themes are not restricted to any time or place.

No synopsis can really do this novel justice, since I feel the structure was simply a way for Hamsun to express some deeper psychological states - and I believe the title is the first clue that this is what he was trying to do. Very simply put, it is the story of a man, Lt. Glahn, who spends a summer in a rural part of Norway hunting and communing with the woods, who then becomes enamored of a local girl. The novel is written as though it is Glahn's memoir, recorded two years after the fact and spurred by a gift in the mail. The local girl that he'd fallen in love with, Edvarda, is an adept at the cat and mouse game of infatuation, and by toying with the Lt., events are set in motion that lead him into a kind of psychosis.

The spare descriptions of the characters leave them open for broader interpretations, and I think it was Hamsun's intention that they represent archetype figures. The same is true of the natural scenes that Hamsun's narrator _does_ go out of his way to describe, down to the tiniest aspect. In one sense this may be read as a catalog of the flora and fauna of the region, but in another, it is the landscape of Lt. Glahn's mind, and a clue as to just how disturbed he is.

Hamsun's writing is deceptively simple, and a welcome relief from the bloated prose of fin-de-siecle novels. The edition I read was a translation by James McFarlane, and in its simple sentances and growing unease, I was reminded of Robert Aickman's stories. They too have a way of beginning in a pedestrian manner, but transform into unsettling and sometimes bizarre accounts of hidden feelings and mental states.

This book had quite an effect on me, and I think it is unfairly obscure. A classic, and highly recommended.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Love in the Wilderness, February 11, 2004
By 
B Brown (Portland, OR) - See all my reviews
In Greek mythology, Pan, the God of wilderness, is depicted as having a human torso and head with a goat's horns, ears and legs. This book centers around the story of one Lieutenant Glahn's sojourn to the Norwegian countryside as he lives in a remote cabin on the edge of the forest. Not much there you might think, but this book is less visible action than of the currents in the mind.

This isn't to say that what does occur is boring-in fact some of the acts are almost overwhelming at the end-but the action, like Hamsun's more famous novel Hunger, ultimately is an inward happening. It is when Glahn falls for local heartthrob Edvarda that the book moves away from its meditative beginnings and into the intensity of feeling found in Hunger. Soon it is this love-embraced, unrequited, and scorned-that consumes everything in the vain, but intensely perceptive Lieutenant Glahn.

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The masterpiece of the master, July 15, 1998
By A Customer
This book is truely amazing. I recomend this novel to ALL people who enjoy literature and poetry. It can't be done better than this. The best novel by Hamsun. Perhaps the best novel ever written... Too bad you don't understand Norwegian.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Spiral down into irrational behavior, January 16, 1998
By 
Olivia Haverly (Ventura, California) - See all my reviews
Pan is a memorable, startling story of a seemingly rational guy acting more and more irrationally over a relationship with a woman, where the relationship is brief, intense, mostly awkward and goes from bad to worse. Kind of like Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice", but on steroids and that ends badly.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Devastatingly Accurate Depiction of the Male Psyche, September 25, 2000
By 
Rick Migliore (University Place, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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I wish I had read Hamsun when I was a teenager with wild emotions, but it's just as well that I read Pan at 29, as I'm now old enough to fully appreciate his work. Hamsun's insight into the male psyche is devastatingly accurate. At times I wanted to leap to my feet to say, "that's me! that's me he's writing about!!" Hamsun demonstrates how a love gone bad can destroy a man's mind.
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Difficult read, March 27, 2003
By 
Tara Chklovski (Marina Del Rey, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I personally preferred his other works much more. Pan seemed to be really hard to read. It has some really beautiful prose with lyrical descriptions of the forests, but even though its a very short novel, I couldn't finish it.'Mysteries', 'Growth of the soil', 'wayfarers' and 'Hunger' were much better !
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This product

Pan: From Lieutenant Thomas Glahn's Papers.
Pan: From Lieutenant Thomas Glahn's Papers. by Knut; McFarlane, James W. (trans) Hamsun (Hardcover - 1955)
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