Karen Blixen was born in Rungsted, Denmark, in 1885. After studying
art at Copenhagen, Paris and Rome, she married her cousin, Baron
Bror Blixen-Finecke, in 1914. Together they managed a coffee
plantation in Kenya until they divorced in 1925. She continued on
the farm until a collapse in the coffee market forced her back to
Rungsted in 1931.
Although she had written occasional contributions to Danish
periodicals since 1905 (under the nom de plume of Osceola), her
real debut took place in 1934 with the publication of Seven Gothic
Tales, written in English under the pen name, Isak Dinesen. Out of
Africa (1937) is an autobiographical account of the years she spent
in Kenya. All of her subsequent books were published in both
English and Danish, including Winter's Tales (1942) and The Angelic
Avengers (1936). Among her other collections of stories are Last
Tales (1957), Anecdotes of Destiny (1958), Shadows on the Grass
(1960) and posthumously Ehrengard (1963). In the 1950s she was
mentioned several times as a candidate to receive the Noble Prize
in Literature.
Baroness Blixen died in Rungsted in 1962. In 1991 her house was
opened as The Karen Blixen Museum.
A work of sincere power ... a fine lyrical study of life in East
Africa
*Daily Telegraph*
A compelling story of passion and a movingly poetic tribute to a
lost land
*The Times*
With its lyrical and luminous picture of Kenya, it launched a
million tourist trails
*Guardian*
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