Hallvard Rieber-Mohn
Hallvard Rieber-Mohn was a Norwegian Dominican priest and author.Biography
He was born at Molde in Møre og Romsdal, Norway. His parents were Christian Joachim Rieber-Mohn and Sophie Amalie Rosendahl.
Rieber-Mohn grew up in Hamar, where his father was an editor of Hamar Stiftstidende. Rieber-Mohn was a student at Saulchoir, the Dominican school of theology in Paris from 1945–53. He was then assigned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oslo to St. Dominican Church and Monastery at Neuberggata 15 in the neighborhood of Majorstuen in Oslo.
Rieber-Mohn was an official spokesman for the Roman Catholic Church in Norway. From 1959–66, he was the editor of the magazine St. Olav.
Besides being a columnist at Arbeiderbladet, Rieber-Mohn was a regular contributor on NRK radio programs.
Rieber-Mohn debuted as an author in 1959 with a study of French poet and dramatist Paul Claudel.
In 1982, he completed an essay featuring Norwegian author Sigrid Undset.
He won the Riksmål Society Literature Prize in 1967 and in 1982 he was awarded the Fritt Ord Award.Selected works
- Paul Claudel, 1956
- Det blodige nei. Tyske skjebner fra Weimar til Bonn, 1967
- Forrædere? Streiflys over landssvikets problem, 1969
- Sideblikk, 1970
- Midt på treet, 1972
- Ossietzky, 1974
- Reisegleder. Streiftog i land og sinn, 1975
- Menneske først – kristen så, 1976
- Fra politikk til forbrytelse, 1977
- Alvorets glede, 1978
- Dagbokblad, 1982
- Sten på sten. Fem blikk på Sigrid Undset, 1982