After weeks of silence regarding whether he will accept the Nobel Prize for literature, Bob Dylan has returned the Swedish Academy’s phone calls. As it turns out, he accepts.

The Nobel Foundation posted a statement Friday on its website saying the elusive songwriter had phoned to say, “The news about the Nobel Prize left me speechless,” adding that, “I appreciate the honor so much.”

Dylan was a controversial pick for the prize, and his silence after the Oct. 13 announcement led one Academy member to describe his behavior as “impolite and arrogant.” But maybe he just hates listening to voicemail and just got around to checking his messages.

According to the British newspaper the Telegraph, reporter Edna Gunderson reached the singer by telephone in Oklahoma, where he is currently touring. “Isn’t that something?” Dylan said of the honor. The 75-year-old singer promised, somewhat enigmatically, that he would “absolutely” attend the Nobel award ceremony in December – “if it’s at all possible.”

Gunderson had been scheduled to interview Dylan about an upcoming exhibition of his paintings at London’s Halcyon Gallery. She wrote that their interview lasted two-and-a-half hours, though he refused to be pinned down on the meaning of his lyrics. “I’ll let other people decide what they are,” Dylan told her. “The academics, they ought to know. I’m not really qualified. I don’t have any opinion.”

“At heart,” Gundersen wrote, “he just likes to remain beyond reach.”

– From news service reports


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.