Bør Børson jr. is a satirical novel from the boom period during World War I, written by Norwegian writer Johan Falkberget. It was first published as a feuilleton in the satirical magazine Hvepsen in 1917, then again printed as a feuilleton in the newspaper Nidaros, and issued as a book in 1920.[1] The story was a great success, and has later been adapted into two films (one in 1938 and one in 1974), a comedy, a musical, and a comic series.[1][2]
Plot
"Bør Børson Olderstad" is a farmer's son from the fictional valley of Olderdalen, located in Sør-Trøndelag. Dreaming about money, wealth and a position at the board of the local savings bank, he has changed his last name to Børson, and started a local grocery store. The name Børson is a paraphrase of the Norwegian word børs, from the French: bourse, in English: stock market. Via various burlesque episodes, he eventually ends up as a millionaire. The story ends with a wedding between Bør and Josefine Torsøien, a girl from a nearby farm.
The novel is set in the Norwegian boom period during World War I. Norway did not participate in the war, but the country's merchant fleet carried goods at increasing freight rates. Sea transport was a risky business that cost the lives of 2,000 Norwegian seamen, but a volatile stock market could multiply investments over short periods of time.
Reception
Literary critics barely mentioned the book, but the satire was met with great popularity among readers.[citation needed]
When Falkberget wrote a sequel called Den nye Bør Børson jr. for the magazine Arbeidermagasinet in 1927, he set the condition that the story should not be issued in book form.[1]
^ abcAmdam, Per (1975). "En ny realisme. Historie og samtid". In Beyer, Edvard (ed.). Norges litteraturhistorie (in Norwegian). Vol. 4. Oslo: Cappelen. pp. 456, 457.
^Øisang, Ole (1941). Teater i Trondheim (in Norwegian). Trondheim: Det Trondhjemske Theaterinteressentskab / F. Bruns bokhandels forlag. pp. 268–269.
^Aanderaa, Johs. (1963). "Framsyningane 1953–1962". In Sletbak, Nils (ed.). Det Norske Teatret. Femti år 1913–1963 (in Norwegian). Oslo: Det Norske Samlaget. p. 296.