Lucky Per

Henrik Pontoppidan

Pages

800

Year

1898

Difficulty

Challenging

Themes

ambition, Danish society, disillusionment, identity

This is the one. Lucky Per is the story of Per Sidenius, a pastor’s son from the Danish provinces who reinvents himself as a visionary engineer in Copenhagen, chasing fame, love, and the self he believes he could become. It is a masterpiece of European realism.

Why Start Here

Per is one of the great self-made men of nineteenth-century fiction: charismatic, driven, self-deceiving, and ultimately unable to escape the person he was born as. Pontoppidan follows him across decades and through multiple social worlds, Copenhagen’s Jewish intellectual elite, the rural provinces, the European continent, with relentless psychological insight.

What makes Lucky Per the entry point is that it contains everything Pontoppidan does best. The social observation is precise and sometimes devastating. The character study is deep and patient. And the ending, which I will not spoil, is one of the most quietly devastating in Scandinavian literature. It was rediscovered by English readers thanks to a new translation in 2019, and that translation is excellent.

What to Expect

A long, immersive novel that builds slowly and pays off enormously. The early sections, establishing Per’s background and ambitions, can feel deliberate, but that deliberateness is the point. Pontoppidan is building a world and a person, and both are fully realized by the time the novel reaches its conclusion. Clear your schedule.

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