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*''after the death of the tyrant, a tree who was believed to be dead is flowering again''
*''after the death of the tyrant, a tree who was believed to be dead is flowering again''
==External links==
==External links==
*{{WP|Mio, my Son}}
*{{WP|Mio, My Son}}
{{references}}
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{{title|italics}}
[[Category:Fiction books]]
[[Category:Fiction books]]
[[Category:Publications by title]]
[[Category:Swedish books]]
[[Category:Swedish books]]
[[CATEGORY:Publications by title]]

Revision as of 18:10, 1 May 2015

Mio, min Mio
Mio, min Mio.jpg
AuthorAstrid Lindgren
Released1954

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 in the genre High fantasy.[1]

1987 release of the film adaption of Mio, min Mio

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

  1. John-Henri Holmber, "Lindgren, Astrid (Anna Emilia)", in The Encyclopedia of Fantasy (New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1997/1999), p.582.
  2. Petter Karlsson , "Sagornas likhet är ingen slump" ("The Similarity of the Fairy-tales is no Coincidence") , in Expressen, January 30, 2007. Retrieved July 28, 2010.