About this item
Highlights
- Few American readers seem to be aware that Hermann Hesse, author of the epic novels Steppenwolf and Siddhartha, among many others, also wrote poetry, the best of which the poet James Wright has translated and included in this book.
- About the Author: Herman Hesse (1877-1962) was a German poet and novelist.
- 96 Pages
- Poetry, European
- Series Name: FSG Classics
Description
About the Book
"German text selected from Die Gedichte (in Gesammelte Schriften)."Book Synopsis
Few American readers seem to be aware that Hermann Hesse, author of the epic novels Steppenwolf and Siddhartha, among many others, also wrote poetry, the best of which the poet James Wright has translated and included in this book. This is a special volume--filled with short, direct poems about love, death, loneliness, the seasons--that is imbued with some of the imagery and feeling of Hesse's novels but that has a clarity and resonance all its own, a sense of longing for love and for home that is both deceptively simple and deeply moving.
Review Quotes
"Rilke, T. S. Eliot, Gide, Thomas Mann rightly called Hesse a master... His fiction achieves the glorious anachronism of art: created in the past, it speaks to us in the present. It glorifies the strategies of attempting to become a full human being and it celebrates the nobility of failure." --Webster Schott, Life
"Hesse is a writer of suggestion, of nuance, of spiritual intimation." --Christian Science Monitor "One of the defining spirits of our century." --Ralph Freedman, Princeton UniversityAbout the Author
Herman Hesse (1877-1962) was a German poet and novelist. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1962.