Assar Bubbla (Swedish)
    1987

    Assar Bubbla (Swedish)

    Type:Textbook
    Author:Astrid Lindgren
    Illustrator:Marika Delin
    Publisher:Rabén & Sjögren

    The story of the grand thief Assar Bubbles and about the briefcase he stole one spring day long ago. And about how close it was that there was therefore no book about Pippi Longstocking. Because Assar Bubbles could hypnotize people and that's what he did one day when he sat opposite Astrid Lindgren He made her forget her brown briefcase when she got off at a stop.The book is a bit of a meta-history in which Astrid Lindgren herself and Pippi Longstocking appear. The story was originally published in Fjärde läseboken in 1986, but the very next year there was a picture book edition with illustrations by Marika Delin.The story, however, as Lena Törnqvist pointed out in her book "Man tar ordinary ord - to read about Astrid Lindgren", had a longer prehistory. In the spring of 1951, Astrid Lindgren had lost a portfolio with important manuscripts. Aftonbladet then wrote a notice that the briefcase contained a shorthand Pippi manuscript, which was not true. A public school teacher named Gerda Chambert had seen the notice and given her class the task of writing a sequel. Aftonbladet in turn followed up by publishing three of the essays, one of which was about a Dangerous Fredrik who got hold of the portfolio and tried to blackmail. Astrid Lindgren then wrote to the school and told them that it was actually "Filemon Bubbla" who seized the manuscript and became very annoyed when he could not read the shorthand. One of Astrid Lindgren's very last books had its origins in a forty-year-old newspaper notice and a school essay!

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    Astrid Lindgren in Norway

    The first to bring Astrid Lindgren's books abroad was the publisher Damm & Søn in Oslo, with their Norwegian edition of "Pippi Longstocking" already appearing in 1946. This marked the beginning of a long-standing relationship. Today, most of her books in Norway are published by Cappelen Damm, a publishing house formed through the merger of Cappelen and Damm. Astrid's book adaptations into films also became popular in Norway, as did her famous songs. One of Astrid Lindgren's favorite books was "Hunger" by the Norwegian author Knut Hamsun; she often mentioned it as one of her greatest reading experiences.