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· 분류 : 외국도서 > 소설/시/희곡 > 소설 > 문집
· ISBN : 9798312815429
· 쪽수 : 224쪽
· 출판일 : 2025-03-03
책 소개
Stefan Zweig, a master of psychological fiction and human drama, remains one of the most widely read European writers of the 20th century. His stories, often centered on themes of passion, obsession, fate, and moral dilemmas, capture the fragility of human emotions with remarkable intensity. The Stefan Zweig Collection - Volume 2 brings together five of his most captivating novellas and short stories in new translations that preserve the elegance, tension, and emotional depth of his writing.
This volume opens with Amok, or The Madman of Malaysia, a gripping tale of a European doctor in the colonies who, consumed by guilt and desire, unravels in a feverish confession of love and madness. In Letter from an Unknown Woman, one of Zweig's most famous works, an anonymous letter reveals the heartbreaking story of a woman's lifelong, unreciprocated devotion to a man who never truly saw her.
The Moonlit Alley is a chilling and atmospheric piece, where guilt and memory torment a man haunted by a fateful decision. In Twilight Tale, Zweig explores the fragility of illusion and the way time erodes the romanticized past. Finally, The Fantastic Night presents a dazzling psychological journey, following a man who, through an unexpected encounter, awakens to the meaning and depth of existence in a single transformative evening.
Each of these stories showcases Zweig's unmatched ability to capture the contradictions of human nature-our desires and regrets, our illusions and awakenings. Whether depicting forbidden love, guilt-ridden confessions, or profound existential revelations, his storytelling remains as haunting and relevant as ever.
This volume offers modern readers a fresh experience of Zweig's timeless narratives, preserving the emotional richness and lyrical beauty of his prose. The Stefan Zweig Collection - Volume 2 invites both longtime admirers and new readers to immerse themselves in the powerful, often unsettling world of one of literature's greatest observers of the human soul.