The Collected Stories of Stefan Zweig
By Stefan Zweig
Translated by Anthea Bell
By Stefan Zweig
Translated by Anthea Bell
By Stefan Zweig
Translated by Anthea Bell
By Stefan Zweig
Translated by Anthea Bell
Part of Pushkin Press Classics
Category: Short Stories | Literary Fiction
Category: Short Stories | Essays & Literary Collections
-
$24.95
Feb 04, 2025 | ISBN 9781805331827
-
Nov 05, 2013 | ISBN 9781782270706
-
$24.95
Feb 04, 2025 | ISBN 9781805331827
-
Nov 05, 2013 | ISBN 9781782270706
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Praise
âa comparison between Bellâs English rendering and the original German reveals that she rarely deviates from Zweigâs languageâand when she does, it is in pursuit of the aesthetic and psychological spirit of the original over artless mechanical accuracy. . . Zweig is at once the literary heir of Chekhov, Conrad, and Maupassant, with something of Schopenhauerâs observational meditations on psychology thrown in. The Collected Stories of Stefan Zweig is a major book of cultural and historical importance, and Pushkin Press has done the literary world a service by releasing it in such an attractive volume.â â Okla Elliott, The Harvard Review Online
âWhat did Zweig have that brought him the fanatical devotion of millions of readers, the admiration of Herman Hesse, the invitation to give the eulogy at the funeral of Sigmund Freud? To learn that, we would have to have a biography that illuminated all aspects of his work, that read all of his books, and that challenged, rather than accepted, the apparent modesty of his statements about his life and work.â â Benjamin Moser, Bookforum
âAmok, a 1922 novella (recently reissued in Pushkin Pressâs Collected Stories, translated by Anthea Bell). . . is quintessentially Zweig, masterful in generating suspense, operatically predictable (the woman always dies in Act Four, so the man has a story to tell in Act Five), and drenched in the implicit mores of the day, which Zweig tweaked in his modest fashion by depicting a clean abortion as a better option than a coat hanger. . . . Amok is a compelling story: for its meticulous portrait of the doctorâs emotional process, its compression, and the almost identically sharp observations of gestures, movements, the charged silences in a conversation.â â Gary Indiana, Bookforum
âFor far too long, our links with Zweig, all too readily consigned to the dustbin of literary history, have been broken. Pushkin Pressâs phenomenal, heartbreaking collection is a reminder that itâs time to forge them again.â â Tara Burton, Los Angeles Review of Books
âWith each story there is a plea for help, a flicker of hope and an ultimate betrayal.â â The New York Daily News
âAnd thanks to Anthea Bell, who has brought us the beautiful translations of W. G. Sebald, we now have many of the books that made Zweig the Updike of his time, from the novel Beware of Pity to his memoir and now The Collected Stories, a fat, orange volume that brings together several dozen of the short works upon which Zweigâs reputation rested in his heyday.â â New York Observer
âThe Collected Stories of Stephan Zweig [is] 720 pages of pure surprise and Iâm grateful to the Pushkin Press for bringing it out and helping me to figure out why Iâve been hearing that name for so many years, and finally delving in. You wonât regret it you do too.â â Eric Alterman, The Nation
âOne of the joys of recent years is the translation into English of Stefan Zweigâs stories. They have an astringency of outlook and a mastery of scale that I find enormously enjoyable.â - Edmund de Waal, author of The Hare with the Amber Eyes
â[T]he time has come for Zweig to enter into Americaâs literary conversation.â â Flavorwire
âOne hardly knows where to begin in praising Zweigâs work.â - Ali Smith
âZweig belongs with those masters of the novella-Maupassant, Turgenev, Chekhov.â âPaul Bailey
âOne of the masters of the short story.â - Nicholas Lezard, Guardian
âThe stories are as page-turning as they are subtle⊠Compelling.â - Guardian
âTouching and delightful. Those adjectives are not meant as faint praise. Zweig may be especially appealing now because rather than being a progenitor of big ideas, he was a serious entertainer, and an ardent and careful observer of habits, foibles, passions and mistakes.â â A.O. Scott, The New York Times
âStefan Zweig⊠was a talented writer and ultimately another tragic victim of wartime despair. This rich collection⊠confirms how good he could be.â - Eileen Battersby, Irish Times
Table Of Contents
Forgotten Dreams
In the Snow
The Miracles of Life
The Star Above the Forest
A Summer Novella
The Governess
Twilight
A Story Told in Twilight
Wondrak [unfinished]
Compulsion
Moonbeam Alley
Amok
Fantastic Night
Letter from an Unknown Woman
The Invisible Collection
Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman
Downfall of the Heart
Incident on Lake Geneva
Mendel the Bibliophile
Leporella
Did He Do It?
The Debt Paid Late