Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.10.2018, Blaðsíða 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.10.2018, Blaðsíða 1
LÖGBERG HEIMSKRINGLA The Icelandic Community Newspaper • 15 October 2018 • Number 20 / Númer 20 • 15. október 2018 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40012014 ISSN: 0047-4967 VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA evening of lights Tribute Dinner in Honour of Past Presidents, Directors, Editors, & Volunteers of Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc. Friday, November 9, 2018 Cocktails: 6:00 p.m. (cash bar) Dinner and Program: 7:00 p.m. Holiday Inn Winnipeg South 1330 Pembina Highway | Winnipeg, MB More information inside...Buffet Dinner | Entertainment & Dancing | Prizes & Draws evening of lights in Honour of Past Presidents, Directors, Editors, & Volunteers of Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc. Friday, November 9, 2018 Cocktails: 6:00 p.m. (cash bar) Dinner and Program: 7:00 p.m. Holiday Inn Winnipeg South 1330 Pembina Highway | Winnipeg, MB Price: $90 (includes $35 tax receipt) Business Attire and Decorations Dietary needs: email: LH@LH-INC.CA For tickets Contact Lögberg-Heimskringla 204-927-5645 or LH@LH-INC.CA or online at WWW.LH-INC.CA Deadline for ticket purchase is November 2, 2018 Tickets Available Now Grant Stefanson, President/Vice President Julianna Bjornson, President/Vice President Bill Perlmutter, Treasurer Elva Jonasson, Secretary Brian Tomasson, Director Dr. Allan Johnson, Director Dr. Lyle Hillman, Director Dr. Ron Goodman, Director Ernest Stefanson, Director Margaret Kernested, Director Skuli Sigfusson, Director Vi Hilton Bjarnason, Director Evelyn Thorvaldson, Director – In Memory Garry Oddleifson, Director – In Memory J. S. Laxdal, Director – In Memory The Honourable Kris Stefanson, Director – In Memory Walter Sopher, Director – In Memory Bill Valgardson, Editor Caelum Vatsndal, Editor David Fuller, Editor Gunnor Isfeld, Editor Steinthor Gudbjartson, Editor Joan Eyolfson Cadham, Editor – In Memory Lillian Vilborg MacPherson, Editor – In Memory Ragnar Bergman, Director – In Memory Arni Thorsteinson, Senior Subscription Sponsor Buffet Dinner Entertainment & Dancing Prizes & Draws Entertainment by Icelandic DJ Kent Gudmundson To an avid reader there is nothing as exciting as finding a new author. Winnipeg readers were introduced to Ragnar Jónasson on Saturday, September 29th, at McNally Robinson Booksellers in Winnipeg. A week after his appearances in Winnipeg and Gimli, Ragnar’s books claimed three of the five Winnipeg bestseller spots for paperback fiction. Snowblind and Blackout claimed the first and second spots, while Nightblind occupied the fourth spot. In his introductory remarks that evening, Consul General Þórdur Bjarni Guðjónsson reminded those gathered that the first Icelandic crime novel was actually written by Jóhann Magnús Bjarnasson, who had come to Canada in 1875. Ragnar was not yet a teenager when he began reading Agatha Christie novels. At seventeen he began translating the first of fourteen of Christie’s novels into Icelandic. In her autobiography, Christie wrote that she regretted having made her character, Hercule Poirot, a retired police officer when she created him. Ragnar took note of this and his first detective, Ari Thor, is a young man at the beginning of his career in the police force. We have a writers competition in Iceland to thank for Ragnar’s emergence as a crime writer. As Ragnar himself describes it, the competition was to find an Icelandic Dan Brown. In the end, the competition did not declare a winner but the publisher did offer to publish Ragnar’s first novel, Fölsk nóta, whose main character is Ari Thor, a theology student searching for his missing father. This novel has not yet been translated into English. Ragnar then proposed to his publisher that Ari Thor give up theology and become a police officer learning the ropes in Siglufjörður. This was the beginning of the Dark Iceland series. We will soon be treated to his new series, Hidden Icela d, which features Hulda Hermannsdottir, who is an about-to-be-retired detective in Reykjavík. The first novel in this series is Darkness, which is now available in bookstores. Throughout the evening’s conversation with Terry McLeod, who confessed that his two favourite things were Iceland and crime novels, we learned how closely Ragnar is tied to the town of Siglurfjörður in the north of Iceland. The community has a population 1,200 and was home to his grandparents. Ragnar likes setting his novels in the smaller communities because he believes that fewer suspects makes the novel more interesting. A number of his ancestors left Siglufjörður to come to Canada and, in fact, Ragnar feels it is just random luck that he wasn’t born in Canada. He fully suspects he is related to people in Manitoba and beyond. Prior to his evening at McNally Robinson, Ragnar had an afternoon book signing in Gimli at Tergesen’s, where he was pleasantly surprised to be greeted in perfect Icelandic. A crowd of enthusiastic fans thronged the aisles of the store’s substantial book department to listen to a short reading and then meet the author. Along with Yrsa Sigurðardóttir, Ragnar co-founded the Iceland Noir Festival in 2013. That year’s featured writer was Ann Cleaves, who writes the Shetland series. The festival has grown with each passing year and it is supported by Iceland’s First Lady, Eliza Reid, and Iceland’s Prime Minister, Katrín Jakobsdóttir, who did her master’s thesis on the work of crime writer Arnaldur Indriðason. In 2020, the festival’s featured writer will be Ian Rankin, with whom Ragnar plays soccer for the Scottish crime writers’ team. Ragnar continues to work as a finance lawyer in Reykjavík, where he lives with his wife and two daughters. He believes in keeping his writing life separate from his legal world. In his novels, he has only included two characters who are lawyers. The event at McNally Robinson was sponsored by the Icelandic Canadian Frón, Lögberg-Heimskringla, and the Consulate General of Iceland. Lorna Tergesen with Ragnar Jónasson. Richard Rosin with Ragnar and his daughter, Kira, at McNally Robinson. PHOTO: ALICYN GOODMAN Ragnar Jónasson tops local bestseller list Alicyn Goodman Winnipeg, MB PHOTO: STEFAN JONASSON INSIDE A memorable journey / page 7 Afi hits the road PHOTO: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS A great figure in Icelandic literature / pages 10 - 12 Snorri Sturluson PHOTO: STEFAN JONASSON The evolution of family names among immigrants / page 14 Icelandic surnames PHOTO: PIXABAY FALL CULTURAL ISSUE

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