Timo Kustaa Mukka (17 December 1944 - 27 March 1973) was a Finnish author who wrote about the lives of people in Lapland.
Timo Mukka was born in Bollnäs in Sweden. During his life Mukka studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki and completed nine novels, written in a lyrical prose style, about the harsh conditions in Lapland, the region of his childhood and of most of his adult life. These books were published in the years between 1964 and ...
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Timo Kustaa Mukka (17 December 1944 - 27 March 1973) was a Finnish author who wrote about the lives of people in Lapland.
Timo Mukka was born in Bollnäs in Sweden. During his life Mukka studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki and completed nine novels, written in a lyrical prose style, about the harsh conditions in Lapland, the region of his childhood and of most of his adult life. These books were published in the years between 1964 and 1970.
In the early 1960s there sprang up a movement in Finnish literature called spontaneous-confessional fiction. It was heavily influenced by the writings of Henry Miller. Its two most prominent representatives were the enfants terribles of modern Finnish literature, poet and translator Pentti Saarikoski and author Hannu Salama. Among the writers belonging to this movement, Mukka is considered the most original as well as the most consistent in his writing.
In 1973 there was a story on Mukka in the Finnish magazine Hymy which is believed to...
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