
The Hesse/Mann Letters
About this book
The letters present two great XX century Nobel Prize writers grieving for the ruined world. In the 1930s and 1940s, they rail against the stupidity of war and the cowardice of diplomats, against the social savagery of the Nazis, against the blind forces of abstraction and nationalism. They brood about the fate of Germany and of Europe after the last shots have been fired. They have lived through a time of extraordinary horror and yet they have not surrendered to despair or nihilism. Reading the letters, the reader will feel like some privileged guest in a special room, sitting off to the side somewhere, listening while these men talk.
Where to buy
No purchase options available at this time.
More by Hermann Hesse

The Assignment: or, On the Observing of the Observer of the Observers
Friedrich Dürrenmatt, Joel Agee, Theodore Ziolkowski

The Glass Bead Game
Hermann Hesse, Theodore Ziolkowski

A Very German Christmas: The Greatest Austrian, Swiss and German Holiday Stories of All Time
Hermann Hesse, Arthur Schnitzler, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Martin Suter, Thomas Mann, Joseph Roth, Rainer Maria Rilke, Heinrich Heine, Erich Kästner

Autobiographical Writings
Hermann Hesse