Margins
1905
First Published
3.21
Average Rating
91
Number of Pages

Un retrat sense pietat de l'ocàs de l'aristocràcia europea del 1900 per un dels grans autors de l'impressionisme alemany. Després d'un llarg viatge pel sud d'Europa, Felix von Bassenow torna al castell i les propietats familiars. Allí es retroba amb la seva dona, l'elegant i malaltissa Annemarie, que després de perdre un fill se sent cada dia una mica més lluny de la vida terrenal. Felix confia que la seva dona no trigui a sobreposar-se al seu estat nerviós, però l'Annemarie s'ha envoltat de persones que la protegeixen i li recorden constantment la seva pè l'oncle Thilo, un home brillant que tothom admira, i la seva millor amiga, la senyora von Malten. En l'atmosfera sufocant d'un castell en decadència, en Felix es deixa seduir per la jove Mila, mentre presencia l'enfonsament de les seves pròpies conviccions i d'un món que ell es creia cridat a perpetuar.

Avg Rating
3.21
Number of Ratings
138
5 STARS
4%
4 STARS
33%
3 STARS
44%
2 STARS
17%
1 STARS
1%
goodreads

Author

Eduard von Keyserling
Eduard von Keyserling
Author · 10 books

Eduard Graf von Keyserling (May 15, 1855 – September 28, 1918) was a Baltic German fiction writer and dramatist and an exponent of literary Impressionism. Keyserling was born at Schloss Tels-Paddern, Courland Governorate, within the Russian Empire, now Kalvene parish, Liepaja District in Latvia. He belonged to an ancient family of Baltic German nobility and was a cousin of the philosopher Hermann Keyserling. He died in Munich, Bavaria. Keyserling's early novels Fräulein Rosas Herz. Eine Kleinstadtliebe (1887) and Die dritte Stiege (1892) were influenced by Naturalism. His essays on general and cultural questions, like his theater plays, are forgotten. His narrative, novellas and novels, after 1902, place Keyserling at the forefront of German literary Impressionism. A subtle and elegant stylist, Keyserling's narrative is unforgettable for its evocative ambience and "feel". His most emblematic work is perhaps Fürstinnen (Princesses), only superficially related to the typical German 19th century Schlossroman. Somehow midway between Ivan Turgenev and Franz Kafka, there is a certain pessimistic kinship between Keyserling and Anton Chekhov.

548 Market St PMB 65688, San Francisco California 94104-5401 USA
© 2025 Paratext Inc. All rights reserved