Odd S. Lovoll has spent his career chronicling the stories of Norwegian
immigrants to the United States and Canada. He, too, was an immigrant at
a young age, and like many international migrants returned to his
homeland for a period during his young adult life before settling
permanently in the United States. This personal connection has long
informed his work, and now he turns his academic's eye to his own
story.
In Two Homelands, Lovoll narrates the full arc of his life, beginning
with memories of hardship during World War II, while his father was
separated from the family, followed later by the devastating loss of his
older brother in a sailing accident. He considers language and cultural
barriers faced as an immigrant to the United States and then as an
outsider when he returned to Norway. He traces his early years as a
teacher in Norway, his marriage and family life, and on through his
scholarly work and extensive career as a researcher, writer, and
professor in the United States.
Through autobiographical tales interwoven with details of his research,
this book links Lovoll's experience with that of other immigrants and
points to intriguing intersections in his professional and personal
lives.