Aststrid Agna Emiglia The Lindgrenschwed children's writer whose books have been translated in more than 85 languages and published in more than 100 countries. Today, she is best known for her works on Carlson Living on the Roof and Peppi Dovgapanchuk. Astrid Eriksson was born on November 14, 1907, in southern Sweden, in the small town of Wimmerby in Kalmar, Smoland, in a farm family. She became the second child of Samuel Augustus Ericsson and his wife Anna. Her father worked in rural affairs on a rented parcel in Nessa, on the outskirts of the town. Astrid had an older brother, Gunnar (1906-1974), and two sisters, Anna Ingrid Wall (1911-2002) and Ingert Britt Salome (1916-1997). Later, brother Astrid became a member of the Swedish Parliament. As Lindgren herself wrote in the autobiographical collection My Fictions (1971), she grew to the age of "horses and convertibles". The main means of transportation for the family was the horse-drawn carriage, the pace of life was slower, the entertainment easier, and the relations with the environment more intimate. These circumstances have fostered the writer's love of nature - this feeling permeated Lindgren's creativity, from the eccentric stories of Captain Peppy Dovgupanchuk's daughter to the story of Ronnie, the robber's daughter.
Aststrid Agna Emiglia The Lindgrenschwed children's writer whose books have been translated in more than 85 languages and published in more than 100 countries. Today, she is best known for her works on Carlson Living on the Roof and Peppi Dovgapanchuk. Astrid Eriksson was born on November 14, 1907, in southern Sweden, in the small town of Wimmerby in Kalmar, Smoland, in a farm family. She became the second child of Samuel Augustus Ericsson and his wife Anna. Her father worked in rural affairs on a rented parcel in Nessa, on the outskirts of the town. Astrid had an older brother, Gunnar (1906-1974), and two sisters, Anna Ingrid Wall (1911-2002) and Ingert Britt Salome (1916-1997). Later, brother Astrid became a member of the Swedish Parliament. As Lindgren herself wrote in the autobiographical collection My Fictions (1971), she grew to the age of "horses and convertibles". The main means of transportation for the family was the horse-drawn carriage, the pace of life was slower, the entertainment easier, and the relations with the environment more intimate. These circumstances have fostered the writer's love of nature - this feeling permeated Lindgren's creativity, from the eccentric stories of Captain Peppy Dovgupanchuk's daughter to the story of Ronnie, the robber's daughter.
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