Image for Late Fame

Late Fame

Part of the Pushkin Collection series
See all formats and editions

First English publication of a recently rediscovered novella by one of the greatest European writersOne seemingly ordinary evening, Eduard Saxberger arrives home to find the fulfilment of a long-forgotten wish in his sitting room: a visitor has come to tell him that the youth of Vienna have discovered his poetic genius.

Saxberger has written nothing for thirty years, yet he now realises that he is more than merely an Unremarkable Civil Servant, after all: a Venerable Poet, for whom Late Fame is inevitable - if, that is, his new acolytes are to be believed... Arthur Schnitzler was one of the most admired, provocative European writers of the twentieth century.

The Nazis attempted to burn all of his work, but his archive was miraculously saved, and with it, Late Fame.

Never published before, it is a treasure, a perfect satire of literary self-regard and charlatanism. Arthur Schnitzler (1862-1931) was one of the most influential European writers of the twentieth century, perhaps best known to British readers for his novella Dream Story.

He qualified as a doctor but was increasingly driven to a career in writing, resulting in celebrated plays, novellas and novels which explore the great existential subjects of the modern age.

Ever controversial and ahead of his time, he was close friends with Zweig and Freud, and a member of the 'Young Vienna' circle of writers who regularly met at a café nicknamed 'Megalomania' - the very same clique and café he satirises so deliciously in Late Fame.

Pushkin Press also publishes Casanova's Return to Venice, Fräulein Else and Dying.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Pushkin Press
1782271325 / 9781782271321
Hardback
833.912
08/10/2015
United Kingdom
English
General
192 pages
17 cm
Translated from the German.