AUDIOBOOK

The Stefan Zweig Collection - Volume 2

Stefan ZweigSeries: Stefan Zweig Collection
(0)
Duration
8h 6m
Year
2026
Language
English

About

Stefan Zweig was the most translated, widely read German-language author of the 1920s–30s, often outselling Mann or Hesse abroad. His gift was the compressed psychological novella: lucid prose, tight pacing, and characters trapped in obsessions they cannot master. After 1945 his reputation faded as modernism prized formal experiment he largely refused, but recent readers have rediscovered the craft beneath his apparent simplicity.
This volume gathers five novellas (1911–1927) that show his range:
Amok: a German doctor in colonial Malaya recounts how a woman's request for an illegal abortion unleashes a spiral of desire, power, and violence.
Letter from an Unknown Woman: a Viennese writer receives a final letter from a woman who loved him all her life-yet he cannot remember her. Is her devotion sublime or pathological?
The Moonlit Alley: guilt and memory persecute a man haunted by a death he might have caused or prevented.
Twilight Tale: nostalgia collapses when the past, lovingly remembered, proves false or incomplete.
The Fantastic Night: a single night of revelation overturns a man's sense of who he is.
Across them, Zweig returns to bourgeois, educated protagonists who are psychologically fragile despite outward success; to women whose inner depth men fail to recognize; and to obsession as both a defining human force and a destructive one. His life shadows the themes: born in Vienna (1881) to a wealthy Jewish family, he was formed by a cosmopolitan Europe shattered by war and fascism. Exiled from Austria in 1934, he died by suicide in Brazil in 1942, despairing at Europe's ruin. Read as psychological case studies, these stories remain haunting, dramatic, and hard to forget.

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