Arto Paasilinna

Arto Paasilinna
October 2007 (aged 65), Helsinki Book Fair
Born(1942-04-20)20 April 1942
Kittilä, Lapland, Finland
Died15 October 2018(2018-10-15) (aged 76)
Espoo, Finland
Occupationjournalist, novelist, poet
EducationAdult Education College, Lapland (1962-1963)
Periodsince 1972 (fiction)
since 1964 (non-fiction)
Genrepicaresque, comedy, satire
Notable worksThe Year of the Hare (1975)
The Howling Miller (1981)
Notable awardsAir Inter (France)
1989 The Year of the Hare

Acerbi (Italy)
1994 The Year of the Hare

UNESCO Collection
1994 The Year of the Hare
RelativesErno Paasilinna (brother)
Reino Paasilinna (brother)

Arto Tapio Paasilinna (Finnish: [ˈɑrto ˈpɑːsiˌlinːɑ], approximately AR-toh PAH-see-LIN-nah; 20 April 1942 – 15 October 2018) was a Finnish writer, being a former journalist turned comic novelist. One of Finland's most successful novelists, he won a broad readership outside of Finland in a way few other Finnish authors have before. Translated into 27 languages, over seven million copies of his books have been sold worldwide, and he has been claimed as "instrumental in generating the current level of interest in books from Finland".

Paasilinna is mostly known for his 1975 novel The Year of the Hare (Jäniksen vuosi), a bestseller in France and Finland, translated into 18 languages, awarded three international prizes, and adapted twice into feature films: a 1977 Finnish film directed by Risto Jarva called The Year of the Hare, and a 2006 French film directed by Marc Rivière called Le Lièvre de Vatanen.

Arto Paasilinna's brothers are the writers Erno Paasilinna, Reino Paasilinna and Mauri Paasilinna.