Mio, min Mio: Difference between revisions
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'''''Mio, min Mio''''' ("Mio, my Mio"; published in English as ''Mio, my Son'') is a Swedish language children's book by [[Astrid Lindgren]]. The book has been described as a work of High Fantasy.<John-Henri Holmber, "Lindgren, Astrid (Anna Emilia)", in ''The Encyclopedia of Fantasy'' (New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1997/1999), p.582.</ref> | '''''Mio, min Mio''''' ("Mio, my Mio"; published in English as ''Mio, my Son'') is a Swedish language children's book by [[Astrid Lindgren]]. The book has been described as a work of High Fantasy.<ref>John-Henri Holmber, "Lindgren, Astrid (Anna Emilia)", in ''The Encyclopedia of Fantasy'' (New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1997/1999), p.582.</ref> | ||
As both ''Mio, min Mio'' and the first two volumes of ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' were published in 1954 and can be said to carry some apparent similarities, a Swedish humorous newspaper article concocted a fictitious conspiracy theory that Tolkien and Lindgren must have secretly met some time in the 1930s and agreed upon writing ''"fairy-tales of their own but with a common theme"'' ("var sin saga med gemensamt tema"). The joke aside, the similarities are quite abound:<ref>Petter Karlsson , "[http://www.expressen.se/1.537513 Sagornas likhet är ingen slump]" ("The Similarty of the Fairy-tales is no Coincidence") , in ''Expressen'', January 30, 2007. Retrieved July 28, 2010.</ref> | As both ''Mio, min Mio'' and the first two volumes of ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' were published in 1954 and can be said to carry some apparent similarities, a Swedish humorous newspaper article concocted a fictitious conspiracy theory that Tolkien and Lindgren must have secretly met some time in the 1930s and agreed upon writing ''"fairy-tales of their own but with a common theme"'' ("var sin saga med gemensamt tema"). The joke aside, the similarities are quite abound:<ref>Petter Karlsson , "[http://www.expressen.se/1.537513 Sagornas likhet är ingen slump]" ("The Similarty of the Fairy-tales is no Coincidence") , in ''Expressen'', January 30, 2007. Retrieved July 28, 2010.</ref> |
Revision as of 09:25, 28 July 2010
Mio, min Mio | |
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Author | [Astrid Lindgren]] |
Released | 1954 |
Mio, min Mio ("Mio, my Mio"; published in English as Mio, my Son) is a Swedish language children's book by Astrid Lindgren. The book has been described as a work of High Fantasy.[1]
As both Mio, min Mio and the first two volumes of The Lord of the Rings were published in 1954 and can be said to carry some apparent similarities, a Swedish humorous newspaper article concocted a fictitious conspiracy theory that Tolkien and Lindgren must have secretly met some time in the 1930s and agreed upon writing "fairy-tales of their own but with a common theme" ("var sin saga med gemensamt tema"). The joke aside, the similarities are quite abound:[2]
- cloaks granting invisibility
- energy bread (Tolkien: lembas; Lindgren: Mio eats a magic bread which takes away hunger)
- apparently dead trees
- intelligent horses (Tolkien: Shadowfax; Lindgren: Miramis)
- black scouts (Tolkien: the Ringwraiths of Sauron; Lindgren: the black scouts of Kato)
- an evil tyrant who is defeated by two "halflings" – an involuntary hero and his loyal squire
- after the death of the tyrant, a tree who was believed to be dead is flowering again
External links
References
- ↑ John-Henri Holmber, "Lindgren, Astrid (Anna Emilia)", in The Encyclopedia of Fantasy (New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1997/1999), p.582.
- ↑ Petter Karlsson , "Sagornas likhet är ingen slump" ("The Similarty of the Fairy-tales is no Coincidence") , in Expressen, January 30, 2007. Retrieved July 28, 2010.