Stories of five decades / Hermann Hesse ; edited and with an introduction by Theodore Ziolkowski ; translated by Ralph Manheim ; with two stories translated by Denver Lindley.
Language: English Original language: German Publication details: London : Jonathan Cape, 1974.Description: xx, 328 p. ; 23 cmISBN:- 0224010816
- 0224010107
- 833.912
- PZ3.H4525 Sto4 PT2617.E85
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | Fiction - Short stories | HES | Available | 058253 |
Short stories.
The island dream.--Incipit vita nova.--To Frau Gertrud.--November night.--The marble works.--The Latin scholar.--The wolf.--Walter Kömpff.--The field devil.--Chagrin d'amour.--A man by the name of Ziegler.--The homecoming.--The city.--Robert Aghion.--The cyclone.--From the childhood of Saint Francis of Assisi.--Inside and outside.--Tragic.--Dream journeys.--Harry, the Steppenwolf.--An evening with Dr. Faust.--Edmund.--The interrupted class.
"This selection of twenty-three stories (all but three available in English for the first time) offers a wide spectrum of Hesse's writing from 1899 to 1948. The reader can trace Hesse's development from the aestheticism of his youth through the realism and surrealism of the next decades to the classicism of his old age. And the reader who knows Hesse mainly through his major novels of the 'twenties and 'thirties will be surprised to encounter him in a variety of new incarnations. Yet the greatest surprise is to see how faithful he remained to his essential self from first to last. Even as he tests and discards literary modes, he consistently rejects external 'reality' for the sake of an inner world created by imagination.
This obsession with expressing his own consciousness is paralleled by criticism of the world he is fleeing from. In the earliest stories, such critiques amount to an attempt to epater les bourgeois. Later, in stories like 'The Homecoming', the malice and corruption of society are forcefully unmasked. In the parable 'Harry, the Steppenwolf' (1928), Hesse even ridicules the attitude we recognize today as 'radical chic'.
All his stories, as Hesse himself realized, are concerned primarily with his own secret dreams, his own bitter anguish. Stories of Five Decades, arranged in chronological order, is a rewarding display of the full range of this story-telling as it blossomed over a lifetime." -- Inside front cover
Translated from the German.