Recensione:
In fiction, I have been on a Zweig kick. In England over December, I noticed that many British newspapers' year-end recommenders were praising the Pushkin Press for reissuing several works by Stefan Zweig, a brilliant Austrian writer whose work brings to mind that of his compatriot Joseph Roth. (...) these fictions are a treat of prewar European literature. --SYLVIA BROWNRIGG The New York Times
One hardly knows where to begin in praising Zweig's work. One gets the impression that he actively preferred to write about women, and about the great moral crises that send shivers down the spines of polite society. --NICHOLAS LEZARD The Guardian
Journey into the Past is vintage Stefan Zweig lucid, tender, powerful and compelling. CHRIS SCHULER The Independent -- Poignant and tender Journey into the Past is a story of repressed desire and all-consuming love between a poor, young engineer and a married woman. AGNÈS POIRIER -- Zweig belongs with three very different masters who each perfected the challenging art of the short story and the novella: Maupassant, Turgenev and Chekhov. PAUL BAILEY -- The art is in the telling (...) a powerful love story (...) Excellent Foreword by writer Paul Bailey. DAVID HERMAN The Jewish Chronicle -- The secret superstar. JULIE KAVANAGH Intelligent Life (The Economist) -- Fortunately, the Pushkin Press has been publishing some of Zweig's works in fluent translations and handsome editions: it is thus performing a valuable service for British literary culture ... My advice is that you should go out at once and buy his books. --ANTHONY DANIELS The Sunday Telegraph
One hardly knows where to begin in praising Zweig's work. One gets the impression that he actively preferred to write about women, and about the great moral crises that send shivers down the spines of polite society. --NICHOLAS LEZARD The Guardian
Journey into the Past is vintage Stefan Zweig lucid, tender, powerful and compelling. CHRIS SCHULER The Independent -- Poignant and tender Journey into the Past is a story of repressed desire and all-consuming love between a poor, young engineer and a married woman. AGNÈS POIRIER -- Zweig belongs with three very different masters who each perfected the challenging art of the short story and the novella: Maupassant, Turgenev and Chekhov. PAUL BAILEY -- The art is in the telling (...) a powerful love story (...) Excellent Foreword by writer Paul Bailey. DAVID HERMAN The Jewish Chronicle -- The secret superstar. JULIE KAVANAGH Intelligent Life (The Economist) -- Fortunately, the Pushkin Press has been publishing some of Zweig's works in fluent translations and handsome editions: it is thus performing a valuable service for British literary culture ... My advice is that you should go out at once and buy his books. --ANTHONY DANIELS The Sunday Telegraph
L'autore:
STEFAN ZWEIG was born in 1881 in Vienna, a member of a wealthy Austrian - Jewish family. He studied in Berlin and Vienna and was first known as a poet and translator, then as a biographer. Zweig travelled widely, living in Salzburg between the wars, and enjoyed literary fame. His stories and novellas were collected in 1934. In the same year, with the rise of Nazism, he briefly moved to London, taking British citizenship. After a short period in New York, he settled in Brazil where in 1942 he and his wife were found dead in bed in an apparent double suicide.
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