OleEdvart Rølvaag giant on earth I think this book is very interesting story. I have never read Western articles about foreigners. First of all, I think Per Hansa is an actor and a pioneer of nature. Through the story, he showed optimism and courage in difficult times. For him he seems to be a very smart, strong, and natural leader in his community, and through the story he seems to have succeeded in almost everything he does. Speaking of his wife, Bailey, this is a different story; unlike her husband, she can not put up with life in the meadow.
Born on 22 April 1876, OleEdvart Rölvaag is located in the village of Dönna Island and blocks the southern part of the Norwegian coast of the Arctic Circle. In Norway I have hardly received education, I visited the US, moved to Sue, Iowa, and entered the grammar school in Augusta, South Dakota. He then moved to St. Ouff University and graduated in 1905. In 1906 he began teaching in Saint O'Foo. Rölvaag writes other works on the earth in addition to giants. These things include: Immigrants at the time and the kingdom of the building
The severity and rewards of pioneering life in the prairie are the theme of the Earth giant in Ole Rolvaag and Laura Ingalls Wilder's children's book in the Little House series. Sinclair Lewis depicts the life of a small town on the novel main street and Garrison Keeler is in the story of Lake Wobengon. It is kind and gentle. F. Scott Fitzgerald from Sao Paulo wrote about social unrest and desire in young cities in a story such as winter dreams and Ice Palace (posted in Flappers and Philosophers). Henry Wadsworth Long Fellow 's epic "Haiawata song" got inspiration from Minnesota and crowded many places and water in the province. Bob Dylan of Minnesota receives the 2016 Nobel Prize for literature