Gustav Meyrink eBooks

eBooks di Gustav Meyrink editi da Gaeditori di Formato Mobipocket

Gustav Meyrink (Vienna 1868 - Starnberg, Baviera 1932) compie in gioventù ottimi studi ma la sua irrequietezza lo porta a Praga che diventa per lui una seconda patria. Collabora al "Simplicissimus" dove pubblica le sue prime novelle: Orchideen 1904 e Das Wachsfigurenkabinett, 1907. Per una profonda crisi si converte al buddhismo e incomincia a praticare l'occultismo e l'esoterismo. La convinzione che il mondo è assurdo e irreale, le pratiche magiche, le leggende, un'amara satira contro la borghesia, compaiono negli altri suoi romanzi: Der Golem (1915), Das gruene Gesicht (1916), Walpurgisnacht (1917) - pubblicato in questa collana con il titolo La notte di Valpurga - Der weisse Dominikaner (1921), An der Schwelle des Jenseits (1923), Der Engel vom westlichen Fenster (1926).
EBOOK   9788834179154

The Golem. E-book. Formato Mobipocket Gustav Meyrink   -  Gaeditori, 2019  - 

The Golem (original German title: Der Golem) is a novel written by Gustav Meyrink between 1907 and 1914. First published in serial form from December 1913 to August 1914 in the periodical Die Weißen Blätter, The Golem was published in book form in 1915 by Kurt Wolff, Leipzig. The Golem was Meyrink's first novel. It sold over 200,000 copies in 1915. It became his most popular and successful literary work, and is generally described as the most "accessible" of his full-length novels. It was first translated into English in 1928. The novel centers on the life of Athanasius Pernath, a jeweler and art restorer who lives in the ghetto of Prague. But his story is experienced by an anonymous narrator, who, during a visionary dream, assumes Pernath's identity thirty years before. This dream was perhaps induced because he inadvertently swapped his hat with the real (old) Pernath's. While the novel is generally focused on Pernath's own musings and adventures, it also chronicles the lives, the characters, and the interactions of his friends and neighbors. The Golem, though rarely seen, is central to the novel as a representative of the ghetto's own spirit and consciousness, brought to life by the suffering and misery that its inhabitants have endured over the centuries. The story itself has a disjointed and often elliptical feel, as it was originally published in serial form and is intended to convey the mystical associations and interests that the author himself was exploring at the time. The reality of the narrator's experiences is often called into question, as some of them may simply be dreams or hallucinations, and others may be metaphysical or transcendent events that are taking place outside the "real" world. Similarly, it is revealed over the course of the book that Pernath apparently suffered from a mental breakdown on at least one occasion, but has no memory of any such event; he is also unable to remember his childhood and most of his youth, a fact that may or may not be attributable to his previous breakdown. His mental stability is constantly called into question by his friends and neighbors, and the reader is left to wonder what if anything that has taken place in the narrative actually happened.

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