The Serious Game


The Serious Game is a 1912 novel by Hjalmar Söderberg. It tells the story of a man and a woman who fall in love when young, and remain in love, but stay separated and marry others.
Three Swedish films based on the book have been produced: Den allvarsamma leken, Games of Love and Loneliness and A Serious Game.

Synopsis

Sweden at the turn of the previous century. Arvid, an ambitious and well-educated young man, meets Lydia, the daughter of a landscape painter, during an idyllic summer vacation and falls in love. Lydia, however, has other suitors, and Arvid is frightened of being tied down by his emotions. Trapped inside loveless marriages of convenience, they struggle in later years to rekindle the promise of their romance with bitter and tragic results.

Reception

The novel is acknowledged as a classic in Swedish literature. It has been published in more than thirty Swedish editions and translated to at least fourteen different languages.
The book was reviewed in Publishers Weekly in 2002: "Söderberg manifests a keen painterly eye for settings: Arvid and Lydia's affair plays out against a backdrop of serene Stockholm parks, crowded newspaper offices full of workaholic journalists and the spare bedrooms where their trysts take place—and in each locale, the details offered are just enough to create a world of sensations. Feminist readers may take umbrage at the male domination of Arvid's milieu—women get little or no air time, although they would seem to determine the course of the novel. Söderberg creates psychological suspense worthy of Dostoyevski, as Arvid's internal moral conflicts achieve the gravity of physical pain."

In Popular Culture

In an HBO produced supernatural drama series True Blood , in the ending episode 10 of the 6th season one of the main characters — a thousand years old vampireEric Northman is reading Den allvarsamma leken'', while sunbathing naked on top of a snowy mountain when a brief ability to “walk under sun” for the vampires suddenly vanishes.