Gustav Sandgren
Gustav Sandgren | |
|---|---|
![]() Gustav Sandgren with a son from his first marriage; early 1940s. | |
| Born | August 20, 1904 Motala, Östergötland, Sweden |
| Died | August 11, 1983 (aged 78) Lidingö, Stockholm, Sweden |
| Pen name | Gabriel Linde |
| Occupation | Author |
| Spouse |
Titti Lindstedt
(m. 1935; div. 1945) |
| Partner | Ria Wägner |
Gustav Sandgren (20 August 1904 – 11 August 1983) was a Swedish writer.
Early life and writing
Sandgren was born in 1904 in Västra Stenby in Östergötland. Sandgren's parents were Oskar Jakobsson Sandgren and Karolina (born Adolfsson), who gave their son a poor but happy childhood. The father was a handyman and worked as a cooper, among other things, and was in addition to his work a musician and violin maker. The young Sandgren was surrounded by folk music and folk tales, becoming a skilled violinist over the years. He was fascinated by folklore, mystery and dreams.[1]
After elementary school, Sandgren became an industrial worker and worked for five years at the Cloetta chocolate factory in Ljungsbro outside Linköping. From 1926 to 1929, he attended folk high school and then became a full-time writer. By the time of his death in 1983, he had written nearly 80 books. He married Titti Lindstedt in 1935 and lived in Björknäs near Hållsviken, west of Trosa in Södermanland, from 1937 until the early 1940s. He met Ria Wägner in Stockholm in 1944 and moved in with her the following year. They then lived for nearly forty years in an apartment on Lidingö in Stockholm County. He is buried in the memorial grove at Lidingö Cemetery.
Gustav Sandgren preferred to write novels, four of which had autobiographical elements: Du bittra bröd (1935), David blir människa (1943), Liv ge oss svar (1949), and Ungdomens hunger (1960). But he also wrote poetry, travelogues (some together with Ria Wägner), fairy tales, short story collections, and books for children and young adults. He made his big breakthrough with Skymningssagor (Twilight Tales, 1936), a collection of stories with fairy tale motifs that was actually aimed at readers of all ages, but which the publisher chose to release as a collection of short stories for adults. As a translator, he has translated works by Tarjei Vesaas into Swedish, among others.
Together with Harry Martinson, Artur Lundkvist, Erik Asklund and Josef Kjellgren, he formed the literary group Fem unga ("Five young ones").[2] Other accomplishments include fairy tales, and children's books such as Katten Jaums besvärliga jul which is a book about Jaum the cat. Sometimes he wrote under the pseudonym Gabriel Linde. The last name Linde referred to the croft where he stayed in the summer of 1933, located about a kilometre southeast of Norrvrå station in Hölö, Södermanland.
Personal life
He married Titti Lindstedt in 1935. They lived in Björknäs at Hållsviken west of Trosa in Södermanland. In 1945 he left his wife for Ria Wägner, with whom he lived for forty years at Lidingö, Stockholm. The couple had a daughter, author Veronica Wägner, born in 1947.[3]
References
- ^ "Gustav Sandgren, 1904–1983". Svenskt översättarlexikon (in Swedish). Litteraturbanken. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ^ Kumm, Bjorn (12 Dec 1991). "Obituary: Artur Lundkvist". The Independent. London. p. 13.
- ^ Wallmark, Marja. "Maria (Ria) Wägner". Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). Retrieved 24 January 2020.
