A Fortunate Man: Henrik Pontoppidan’s Masterwork with Nick During (NYRB)

19/09/2025 1h 4min
A Fortunate Man: Henrik Pontoppidan’s Masterwork with Nick During (NYRB)

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Episode Synopsis

This week on The Big Book Project I’m joined by Nick During, publicist at New York Review Books, for a deep dive into Henrik Pontoppidan’s monumental novel A Fortunate Man translated by Paul Larkin.Pontoppidan, who won the 1917 Nobel Prize in Literature, gives us one of the great portraits of ambition, love, and disillusionment at the turn of the 20th century. His protagonist, Per, dreams of modernizing Denmark through a grand engineering project, but struggles with depression, family estrangement, and a doomed romance with Jakobe, a brilliant woman from a wealthy Jewish family.Nick and I explore:Why Per is both “lucky” and cursed by self-sabotageJakobe’s role as lover, mentor, and tragic figureThe tension between rural tradition and modern progress in DenmarkHow the novel anticipates modern psychology while rooted in 19th-century realismPontoppidan’s trilogy and why A Fortunate Man deserves a place alongside Tolstoy, Ibsen, and ChekhovNick also shares exciting news on upcoming big books from NYRB, including rediscoveries by Gabriele Tergit and Manuel Mujica Laínez. Support the project on Substack Follow me on Instagram Episode HighlightsPer’s brilliance vs. his depressive self-sabotageLove and mentorship in his relationship with JakobeAnti-Semitism and social class in turn-of-the-century DenmarkThe clash of engineering ambition with political compromisePontoppidan’s overlooked place in world literature A Fortunate Man (NYRB Classics) is available now — highly recommended for anyone ready to spend time inside one of the richest, most complex novels of modern Europe.

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