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Axel (Paladin Books)
  
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Axel (Paladin Books) [Paperback]

Bo Carpelan


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The dominant theme of this novel is the centrality of art in the emergence of a native culture. Sibelius dedicated his 2nd Symphony to Baron Axel Carpelan, and this book tells of the friendship between the two men. The author is the great-nephew of Baron Axel Carpelan.

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the great secret books, 26 Dec 2005
By Frederick Pollack - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Axel (Paladin Books) (Paperback)
This is simply one of the most provocative and moving novels I've ever read. Henry Miller said of Hamsun's *Mysteries that, reading it, he felt he was reading the story of his own life, at a level where empirical differences were irrelevant. *Axel affected me that way. It is one of those rare great novels that are about a soul, not its relational or social determinants (although these are well depicted); offhand, I can only compare it to *Mysteries and to Pessoa's *Book of Disquietude. Weeks after finishing it, I'm still haunted by its sensibility. Tolstoy is invoked often in the novel; imagine Tolstoy rewritten by an agnostic Kierkegaard.

The person on whom it was based was the author's great-uncle. He lived from 1858 to 1919 and was a close friend of Sibelius. The author learned about Axel only while reading about the latter; the name was never mentioned in his family. Axel left no diary; this novel is that diary, covering his entire life, interspersed with third-person sections each of which is a superb (and often heartrending) set-piece. If you don't know Sibelius's music, you will still, I think, be affected by it. But if you do - Axel was the person to whom S. dedicated his 2nd Symphony.
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