Death in Venice: And Seven Other Stories

|
List Price: $10.95
Our Price: $8.76
Your Save: $ 2.19 ( 20% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
|
Manufacturer: Vintage Written By: Thomas Mann

|
Click on the Buy From Amazon.com link to know Amazon.com's best price & availability.
|
|
Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 833.912 EAN: 9780679722069 ISBN: 0679722068 Label: Vintage Manufacturer: Vintage Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 416 Publication Date: 1989-03-13 Publisher: Vintage Release Date: 1989-03-13 Studio: Vintage
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews for Death in Venice: And Seven Other Stories
|
Mann's bestselling work of fiction now appears in a trade paperback format with a striking new jacket. Sales of the classic have totaled over 800,000 copies and average 42,000 copies a year.
|
|
|
Consumer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Depressing German bourgeois narcissism Comment: If you like short stories about grown men who are sexually attracted to boys, suicide, incest, and self-absorbed German narcissism, you'll love Death in Venice. Me, I don't much cotton to such themes in what I read, so I had trouble wading through this morass of early 20th century European bourgeoisie decadence. But as this book was the choice of our book club, I had to persevere.
Of the eight short stories contained in this book, I found only the three middle ones, Mario and the Magician (1929), Disorder and Early Sorrow (1925), and A Man and His Dog (1918) to be of any worth. The others--Death in Venice (1911), Tonio Kröger (1903), The Blood of the Walsungs (1905), Tristan (1902), and Felix Krull (1911)--range from simply tedious and uninsightful to gross and perverse. Interestingly, it is Mann's earlier stories that fall into that category. I suppose these stories were meant to have shock value in their day. But in an era when the most disgusting material imaginable is only a mouse-click away, they seem painfully trite and pedestrian today.
Mann's later stories are better, possibly because as he matured, Mann became a more skillful observer of the beauty and joy of everyday life. But if tinged with sentimentality, these stories don't really inspire. Of all the stories, Mario and the Magician is the only standout. It was the singular tale which kept me riveted with larger than life characters and underlying themes which got beyond the mundane or the merely sexual.
As a whole, this is exactly the type of work that made me dislike studying modern literature as a student. The prose is dense and despite Mann's impressive descriptive ability, the stories do little to uplift the human spirit. Instead, the reader is left encumbered with a myriad of very negative ideas and dreary observations about life. In short, this book was a depressing, annoying, and occasionally disgusting read.
If you want to read something interesting and uplifting, try Angels in Iron.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Works of the Greatest German writer but troubling human being. Comment: Although his very name is synonymous with notoriously long novels such as "Buddenbrooks" and "Magic Mountain", Thomas Mann was prorific short story writer,too. he worked diligently and very punctually in quite disciplinary manner. Of course, above mentioned two book are true essense of his long literary life.However "Death in venice" and other short story that included in this book can be extremely helpful jumping point to explore this great but complext human being. There have been many authors whose works are basically nothing other than narration of their lives. But , in my humble opinion , no one could possibly surpass Thomas Mann. All his works are closely related to his reflections, experiences and his miseries( many might know what I mean),perhaps that's way he so merticulously kept his diary and put all his minute thought without self censoring .Among his numerous works, none are so confessional than "Tonio Kroger" and "Death in Venice". It is well known fact that "Tonio Kroger" was Thomas Mann's favorite work , despite there have been many severe critics , including his own son Golo Mann. Golo Mann, who was a prominent historian wrote unforgettable book on "Wallenstein", remarked on this work " the most terrible work among my father's works and also the worst short story in the 20th centry German literature". In addition to Golo Mann's invective to his own father, there have been numerous critics who , in my opinion, severely disparage "Tonio Kroger". There are not many works that bring almost bi-polarized reaction from readers. Please judge yourself. It's worth it.
In addition to "Tonio Kroger", perhaps most famous Mann's short story " Death in Venice" is also highly recommened to read. the works will cause some outrage, disgust or utter boredom. But, it is unequivocally supreme work of art that should be free from scathing attack from both dilettanttes and philistines. other short stories are also fairly interesting works . "Mario and the Magician" , that show Mann's penetrating insight of the nature of Fascism, "Tristan", the work of cruel irony and grotesque humor,and "Felix Krull" , story that represent how Mann irony targetting himself.
Overall, the book delivers memorable experience.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A great introduction to a litery giant Comment: This is my first time reading Thomas Mann, save for the few excerpts that appear in college literature studies. Thomas Mann is notorious for his lengthy sentences and his never-ending novels, so I picked this as a gentle introduction to his works.
Even just flipping through the short stories will give an impression of how versatile and varied Mann's writing styles could be. Death in Venice, while being his most famous work in this book, is also one of the more difficult ones to read. This was Thomas Mann at his best - his sentences, long and tortuous, rolls through the imagination paragraphs at a time. Felix Krull, on the other hand, is short and succinct, with almost a feel of modern satire permeating through it.
The translation reads pretty clean and straightforward. While this probably probably loses a bit of feel in terms of grammar and structure of the sentences, Mann's styles and the suitability of the German language to this task means that a direct translation would have less flow and may seem cumbersome.
Overall I would say this is a nice illustration of Mann's literary prodigy, without overwhelming those who are not yet initiated into reading his full-sized novels.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Okay Comment: The book was shipped really late and that bothered me. I needed it for class, and i got it three weeks from the day i bought it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Good Introduction to Thomas Mann - Intriguing, Complex Stories Comment: The long novels of Thomas Mann can prove challenging, not unlike those of Henry James. Fortunately, this varied collection - Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories - offers an easier way to become acquainted with Mann's intellectual, psychologically complex literature.
Thomas Mann's lengthy sentences and complex grammatical structures markedly complicate the task of translation. H. T. Lowe-Porter's translation is considered the most accessible version, although at the expense of subdividing many of Mann's sentences. (For comparison with an excellent literal version, look at Stanley Appelbaum's translation of Death in Venice, Dover Publications, 1995).
Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories was first published by Vintage Books in 1954. My edition was printed by Vintage International in 1989; it has neither an introduction nor explanatory notes.
Death in Venice (1911): While vacationing in Venice, the aging, highly respected author Gustave Ashenbach becomes mesmerized by a young boy staying at the seashore with his Polish aristocratic family. Although intellectually aware of his growing obsession, Ashenbach is unable to break away. This somber portrayal of a troubled man is a masterpiece of subtle nuances that illustrates Thomas Mann's ability to create layers of meaning.
Tonio Kroger (1903) is perhaps more biographical as it explores a writer's internal conflict between his desire to be accepted, that is to fit in to a bourgeois life, and his contradictory need to follow his artistic temperament wherever it might lead him.
Mario and the Magician (1929) is more explicitly political, depicting in the guise of an unscrupulous hypnotist a Mussolini-like character. The ending of this intriguing account is a surprise.
The setting in Disorder and Early Sorrow (1925) is Munich, less than a decade after World War I, amid rampant inflation and social upheaval. The narrator, Professor Cornelius, is saddened by the loss of tradition, exemplified by modern art, music, and dance forms so popular with his older children, now young adults. He finds refuge in his study of history. Early sorrow refers to an incident involving his five year-old daughter, Ellie.
A Man and His Dog (1918) is personal, humorous, and almost idyllic, quite different from the more serious topics addressed in the other stories in this collection.
The Blood of the Walsungs (1905) is the most disturbing story in this collection. The two key characters exhibit an aristocratic arrogance and elitism that culminates in incest. In an opera scene Mann draws a close parallel between his two protagonists and Siegmund and Sieglinde in Wagner's Die Walkure.
Tristan (1902) has been described as a retelling of the legend of Tristan and Isolde set in a sanatorium. Detlev Spinell, a tuberculosis patient staying in the Dr. Leander's medical facility, becomes infatuated with another patient, Herr Kloterjahn's wife. Spinell is a largely unsuccessful writer, one that has difficulty relating to others.
In Felix Krull (1911) the narrator is a self-serving, unscrupulous, amoral, confidence man that is somehow likeable. The story ends abruptly, leaving the reader wondering what happens next. Forty years later Thomas Mann resumed work on this story and in 1954 he published the novel The Confessions of Felix Krull, a light, often hilarious account of a man who wins the favor and love of others by enacting the roles that they desire of him.
Thomas Mann was born in Germany in 1875. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1929. He left Germany in 1933, living primarily in Switzerland and the United States until his death in 1955.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
More Information on Death in Venice: And Seven Other Stories
Powell's Books - Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories (Vintage ... Mann's bestselling work of fiction now appears in a trade paperback format with a striking new jacket. Sales of the classic have totaled over 800,000 copies and average 42,000 ...
iPac2.0 Death in Venice and seven other stories / Thomas Mann ; translated by H.T. ... Death in Venice -- Tonio Kroger -- Mario and the magician -- Disorder ...
Powell's Books - Death in Venice: And Seven Other Stories (Vintage ... Eight complex stories illustrative of the author's belief that "a story must tell itself," highlighted by the high art style of the famous title novella...
Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories, Vintage International Series ... Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9780679722069&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3
German 150/Comp Mann, Thomas. Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories. (Vintage) (on 2-hour reserve in OUGL) Bachmann, Ingeborg. The Book of Franza and Requiem for Fanny Goldman. (Northwestern) (on ...
iPac2.0 Death in Venice, and seven other stories / by Mann, Thomas, 1875-1955. ... Death in Venice-- Tonio Kroger -- Mario and the magician -- Disorder ...
GrayGay.com - the place for mature gay men, their admirers and the ... ... at the beach until life throws them a curve. (One of my all time favourites - Ed). Death in Venice, and Seven Other Stories
One Thomas Mann (Germany), Nobel Laureate, 1929: Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories. Luigi Pirandello (Italy), Nobel Laureate, 1934: Naked Masks.
Vintage Catalog | Death in Venice by Thomas Mann Vintage Books: From classic to contemporary, the best books in paperback. Death in Venice And Seven Other Stories Written by Thomas Mann Fiction - Literary | Vintage ...
Magazine Depot - discount magazine subscriptions and renewals ... Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories ... All prices include shipping. Books and other non-subscription products ... |