Mare Kandre
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Mare Kandre (27 May 1962 – 24 March 2005) was a Swedish writer of
Estonian Estonian may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to Estonia, a country in the Baltic region in northern Europe * Estonians, people from Estonia, or of Estonian descent * Estonian language * Estonian cuisine * Estonian culture See also

...
descent. She was born in
Söderala Söderala is a locality situated in Söderhamn Municipality, Gävleborg County, Sweden with 949 inhabitants in 2010. Writer Mare Kandre (1962–2005), was born in Söderala. Olympic sports shooter Fredrik Mossberg (1874-1950) was also born there ...
, a small place in mid-Sweden, and grew up in Gothenburg and Stockholm. Between 1967 and 1969, she lived with her family in British Columbia, Canada, a period which made a very deep impression on her and later in life influenced her writing. She died of an unintentional prescription drug overdose, aged 42. Kandre achieved considerable acclaim in Scandinavia and her works have been translated into more than eight languages. Her novels, short stories and prose poetry often deals with children's, in particular girls', development to adulthood; women's roles; and marginalized and traumatized individuals who opt to break with society's expectations. Kandre's stories have a marked metaphysical dimension which is strengthened by her poetical language and representation, with existential themes paired with contemporary social issues. In her writing she often returns to issues like the expectations placed on women, how alienation develops, and the significance of instincts. Several of her books were influenced by
Gothic fiction Gothic fiction, sometimes referred to as Gothic horror (primarily in the 20th century), is a literary aesthetic of fear and haunting. The name of the genre is derived from the Renaissance era use of the word "gothic", as a pejorative to mean me ...
. Before Kandre entered onto the path of writing, she was the frontwoman for the music group Global Infantilists (1981–1983).


Works

*''I ett annat land'' (In Another Country): prose (1984) *''Bebådelsen'' (The Annunciation): prose poetry (1986) *'' Bübins unge'' (Bübin's kid): novel (1987). Translated into Serbian 2010, titled ''Bimbinino dete'' *''Det brinnande trädet'' (The Burning Tree): novel (1988) *'' Aliide, Aliide'' : novel (1991). Translated into Danish, Norwegian an
German
with the same title *'' Deliria'' : novel (1992) *'' Quinnan och Dr Dreuf'' (The Woman and Dr Dreuf) : novel (1994). Translations: Danish, titled: ''Quinden og doktor Dreuf'', French, titled: ''La femme et le docteur Dreuf'' Russian, titled ''Женщина и доктор Дpeйф'' and Estonian, titled ''Naene ja Dr Dreuf'' *'' Djävulen och Gud'' (The Devil and God): novel (1994). Slovakian translation: ''Diabol a Boh''. German translation: http://www.septime-verlag.at/Buecher/buch_der_teufel_und_gott.html *'' Bestiarium'' : novel (1999) *''Hetta och vitt'' (Heat and White): short stories (2001) *'' Xavier'': novel (2002) Mare Kandre also wrote drama. Of these ''Vilse'' ("Lost") has been staged by several theatres.


Prizes and distinctions

*Scholarship, The Swedish Academy (1984) *Scholarship, The Swedish Authors' Fund (1985) *Aftonbladet's literature prize (1991) *Alfred Bonnier's Centennial Award (1991) * De Nios Vinterpris (The Nine's Winter Prize) (1996) *The Kalleberger scholarship, The Swedish Academy (1999) *Göteborgs-Posten's literature prize (2000) *Award, Alfred Bonnier's Fund for Swedish Writers (2001) *The Dobloug prize, The Swedish Academy (2003) *Mare Kandre also held a long-term writer scholarship from The Swedish Writers’ Union


Further reading

*


External links

*''Mare Kandre - the official web site'

*Steve Sem-Sandberg Mare Kandre hade bråttom att få fram bilden, Under Strecket, SvD April 21, 200

* Writer presentation, Bonniers publishing hous

*Mare Kandre död - DN March 31, 2005

*Författaren Mare Kandre har avlidit - SvD March 31, 2005

*Writer presentation by the English translator Eric Dicken

This article is fetched from :sv:Mare Kandre {{DEFAULTSORT:Kandre, Mare 1962 births 2005 deaths People from Söderala Swedish people of Estonian descent Swedish women writers Writers from Gävleborg County Dobloug Prize winners Drug-related deaths in Sweden