Song for Liv, A

A Song for Liv by Wayne Gudmundson is a love letter to his daughter, Liv. Serendipitously, the modern Nordic name Liv also means ‘life.’ As well as a gift to his daughter, A Song for Liv, is a personal meditation on place, the search for personal and ethnic identity, and the complexities therein, much of which is located in the mists (and myths) of time with only the ancient landscapes of those stories remaining. Combining travel notes, Icelandic history and lore, and family relationships, Gudmundson’s form here—best characterized as hybrid—weaves a tapestry that is at once inviting and accessible, each page entry a stanza-like lyric of the larger song."
—Thom Tammaro, three-time Minnesota Book Award recipient and author of When the Italians Came to My Home Town and Italian Days & Hours

“Written as a gift from a father to his daughter, A Song for Liv gathers up what wisdom and understanding a father can offer. His story begins its search for ancestral places in the Faroe Islands, where Gudmundson explores his investment in the larger Scandinavian world, having claimed a portion of the Faroes as his own. The narrative of the Norse invasion of Scandinavia continues on through Iceland to Canada to the settlement of Gimli, Manitoba, and from there to a small church in North Dakota, the home of Gudmundson’s grandparents and the protean poet K.N., whose spirit hovers over the entire narrative.”
—David Arnason, writer, professor, and Viking from Gimli, Manitoba

$24.95

Wayne Gudmundson bought his first camera and developed his first roll of film in Guam in 1969 while serving aboard the USS Proteus. Since then, his work has gained notoriety and his photographs are part of many permanent collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Arts; the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal; the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, Arizona; the Reykjavik Museum of Photography in Iceland; the Minnesota Historical Society; the State Historical Society of North Dakota; and the Plains Art Museum in Fargo.

ISBN: 978-1-946163-32-5

Page count: 120

Picture Count: 42

Appendix

Paperback

Publication Year: 2021