This European masterpiece from the Nobel prizewinner explores the lure and degeneracy of ideas in an introverted community on the eve of World War I
Thomas Mann was born in 1875 in Lubeck, of a line of prosperous and influential merchants. Mann was educated under the discipline of North German schoolmasters before working for an insurance office aged nineteen. During this time he secretly wrote his first tale, Fallen, and shortly afterwards he left the insurance office to study art and literature at the University of Munich. After a year in Rome he devoted himself exclusively to writing. He was only twenty-five when Buddenbrooks, his first major novel, was published. Before it was banned and burned by Hitler, it had sold over a million copies in Germany alone. His second great novel, The Magic Mountain, was published in 1924 and the first volume of his tetralogy Joseph and his Brothers in 1933. In 1929 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. In 1933 Thomas Mann left Germany to live in Switzerland. Then, after several previous visits, in 1938 he settled in the United States where he wrote Doctor Faustus and The Holy Sinner. Among the honours he recieved in the USA was his appointment as a Fellow of the Library of Congress. He revisited his native country in 1949 and returned to Switzerland in 1952, where The Black Swan and Confessions of Felix Krull were written and where he died in 1955.
Magnificent... a beautiful, feverish account of obsessive love
*Guardian*
Featuring lengthy debates between humanist freemasons and
Jews-turned-Catholics, a long love-scene written entirely in French
and a brilliant hallucinatory journey down the snowy slopes, it
merits multiple readings. A novel for a lifetime not just a rainy
afternoon
*Guardian*
A monumental writer
*Sunday Telegraph*
The greatest German novelist of the 20th century
*Spectator*
Mann is Germany's outstanding modern classic, a decadent
representative of the tradition of Goethe and Schiller. With his
famous irony, he was up there with Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and
Freud, holding together the modern world with a love of art and
imagination to compensate for the emptiness left by social and
religious collapse.
*Independent*
Magnificent... a beautiful, feverish account of obsessive love --
Jonathan Coe * Guardian *
Featuring lengthy debates between humanist freemasons and
Jews-turned-Catholics, a long love-scene written entirely in French
and a brilliant hallucinatory journey down the snowy slopes, it
merits multiple readings. A novel for a lifetime not just a rainy
afternoon * Guardian *
A monumental writer * Sunday Telegraph *
The greatest German novelist of the 20th century * Spectator *
Mann is Germany's outstanding modern classic, a decadent
representative of the tradition of Goethe and Schiller. With his
famous irony, he was up there with Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and
Freud, holding together the modern world with a love of art and
imagination to compensate for the emptiness left by social and
religious collapse. * Independent *
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