
Summer Before the Dark
Stefan Zweig and Joseph Roth, Ostend 1936
Volker Weidermann(Author)
Pushkin Press
Published on 28. January 2016
Book
Hardback
176 pages
978-1-78227-203-8 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
<b>'Absolutely exquisite . . . a contemporary classic' Dave Eggers
'Death in Venice with more sex, more booze, more action.' <i>FT</i>
BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week</b>
Ostend, 1936: the Belgian seaside town is playing host to a coterie of artists, intellectuals and madmen, who find themselves in limbo while Europe gazes into an abyss of fascism and war.
</br>Among them is Stefan Zweig, a man in crisis: his German publisher has shunned him, his marriage is collapsing, his house in Austria no longer feels like home. Along with his lover Lotte, he seeks refuge in this paradise of promenades and parasols, where he reunites with his estranged friend Joseph Roth. For a moment, they create a fragile haven; but as Europe begins to crumble around them, they find themselves trapped on an uncanny kind of holiday, watching the world burn.
'Death in Venice with more sex, more booze, more action.' <i>FT</i>
BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week</b>
Ostend, 1936: the Belgian seaside town is playing host to a coterie of artists, intellectuals and madmen, who find themselves in limbo while Europe gazes into an abyss of fascism and war.
</br>Among them is Stefan Zweig, a man in crisis: his German publisher has shunned him, his marriage is collapsing, his house in Austria no longer feels like home. Along with his lover Lotte, he seeks refuge in this paradise of promenades and parasols, where he reunites with his estranged friend Joseph Roth. For a moment, they create a fragile haven; but as Europe begins to crumble around them, they find themselves trapped on an uncanny kind of holiday, watching the world burn.
Reviews / Votes
Resonant... as Europe tumbles towards darkness, the writers in Ostend create a haven for love and literature - one they know is doomed - that Weidermann evokes with skill and delicacy * Sunday Times * A marvelous book... literary biography at its best * Financial Times * For such a slim book to convey with such poignancy the extinction of a generation of "Great Europeans" is a triumph. * Sunday Telegraph * Elegiac... a potent and melancholy book... Weidermann has combed letters, diaries and reminiscences and used them to tell his sad tale as if it were a novel, in a highly wrought prose style that... matches the heightened emotions and circumstances of his protagonists * Michael Prodger, The Times * Captivating... [an] effortless combination of grand epoch-defining moments with seemingly mundane observations of the everyday... a historical triumph. * Independent * A sign of how far [the revival of Zweig and Roth's work] has succeeded... Weidermann finds a moment of relative calm and normality in the emigres lives * New Statesman * Intimately explores Zweig and Roth's co-dependent friendship * Observer * Sparkling... Weidermann's storytelling is piquant * Publishers Weekly * Taut, novelistic... in lyrical prose, Weidermann recreates the atmosphere of an ephemeral moment... evocative, sharply drawn portraits and a wry, knowing narrative voice make for an engrossing history * Kirkus (starred review) * Weidermann magically evokes the mood of these artistic refugees as the sun set on the civilized order of Europe... abounds in poetry and deadpan understatement... The book is as transporting as fiction - I had to remind myself that it wasn't... Partly this is due to the level of detail. Mr Weidermann knows which cafe each writer favored, what they drank, which manuscripts they read aloud. It could be Hemingway * Wall Street Journal * Deeply affecting, economically expressed and almost unbearably sad * Glasgow Herald * A brilliant, hard to bear, short novel about doom * Tribune * Breezier and more brightly written than a study of two profound minds in torment on the eve of global disaster should reasonably be; an enthralling, juicy read * Big Issue * A fascinating story, brilliantly told. These writers come together for a summer and then move on, providing a snapshot of the desperate situation of the mid-1930s * Jewish Chronicle * Ostend is engaging as a meditation on the act of creation, one that explores how we make refuges out of our own pasts. * New Republic * Compellingly shows this doomed group at one of their last watering holes re-imagining their conversations and repartee * London Magazine * Another winner from Pushkin! * Shiny New Books * A rich, moving and entertaining portrait of a wonderful group of artists in transit * Kaggy's Bookish Ramblings * There's something extraordinarily expressive and expansive about the way friendship has been conveyed throughout this altogether elegiac book * David Marx Book Reviews * A wonderful book, which makes you happy despite its melancholy * glanzundelend.de *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78227-203-8 (9781782272038)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
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Book
01/2017
Pushkin Press
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E-Book
01/2016
Pushkin Press
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Persons
The award-winning writer and literary critic Volker Weidermann was born in Germany in 1969, and studied political science and German language and literature in Heidelberg and Berlin. He is the cultural editor of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung and lives in Berlin.