Lagerlöf made her debut in 1891 with The Gösta Berling saga, a story
about her own region, VĂ€rmland and her home, the country manor
MÄrbacka. With her novel she starts the wave of romantic nationalist
literature in Sweden of the 1890s. Her novel Jerusalem (1901-02) is
about religious emigrants from Sweden to Palestine. She is the author
of Sweden's most read novel, The Adventures of Nils Holgerssons (1906),
a story about a boy traveling across Sweden on the back of a goose. Her
stories often evolve around folklore and supernatural events. One of
the peaks in her career was her novel The Emperor of Portugal (1914).
In 1907 she got a honorary degree at the University of Uppsala, in 1909
she got the Nobel Prize and 1914 she became a member of the Swedish
Academy. Her home MÄrbacka is now a museum visited by thousands of
tourists every year.