A casual introduction, a challenge to a simple game of chess, a lovers' reunion, a meaningless infidelity: from such small seeds Zweig brings forth five startlingly tense tales-meditations on the fragility of love, the limits of obsession, the combustibility of secrets and betrayal. To read anything by Zweig is to risk addiction; in this collection the power of his writing-which, with its unabashed intensity and narrative drive, made him one of the bestselling and most acclaimed authors in the world-is clear and irresistible. Each of these stories is a bolt of experience, unforgettable and unique.
Stefan Zweig was one of the world's most famous writers during the 1920s and 1930s, especially in the U.S., South America, and Europe. He produced novels, plays, biographies, and journalist pieces. Among his most famous works are Beware of Pity, Letter from an Unknown Woman, and Mary, Queen of Scotland and the Isles. He and his second wife committed suicide in 1942. Zweig studied in Austria, France, and Germany before settling in Salzburg in 1913. In 1934, driven into exile by the Nazis, he emigrated to England and then, in 1940, to Brazil by way of New York. Finding only growing loneliness and disillusionment in their new surroundings, he and his second wife committed suicide. Zweig's interest in psychology and the teachings of Sigmund Freud led to his most characteristic work, the subtle portrayal of character. Zweig's essays include studies of Honoré de Balzac, Charles Dickens, and Fyodor Dostoevsky (Drei Meister, 1920; Three Masters) and of Friedrich Hölderlin, Heinrich von Kleist, and Friedrich Nietzsche (Der Kampf mit dem Dämon, 1925; Master Builders). He achieved popularity with Sternstunden der Menschheit (1928; The Tide of Fortune), five historical portraits in miniature. He wrote full-scale, intuitive rather than objective, biographies of the French statesman Joseph Fouché (1929), Mary Stuart (1935), and others. His stories include those in Verwirrung der Gefühle (1925; Conflicts). He also wrote a psychological novel, Ungeduld des Herzens (1938; Beware of Pity), and translated works of Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, and Emile Verhaeren. Most recently, his works provided the inspiration for 2014 film The Grand Budapest Hotel.
An interesting collection of 5 novellas, two of which I had read previously. In both cases, this second reading had been helpful in opening up Zweig's methods for me. As I read this collection I came to see, more and more, the manner in which he builds tension casually in his tales, through simple variations on everyday actions. A person may step away for a moment from a stifling situation, taking a refreshing or necessary break that somehow turns his/her life upside down and threatens their entire future. Of the five novellas only one, "Journey into the Past." did not create that tension for me and two of the ones that are new to me, "Fear" and "Confusion", both did it quite effectively. The others are "A Chess Story," as effective as when first read, and "A Burning Secret," somehow better than when I first encountered it.
Another thing I have learned from this collection is to have patience, to allow the writer to build up his characters and setting before providing the "meat" I am looking for. In this respect, perhaps I am a modern person/reader, wanting everything too quickly. The further removed I am from these stories, the more I realize that the tension I felt and found so effective simply would not have existed without that (seemingly) too slow build-up. So perhaps I am learning as a reader too.
I do recommend this book to those who enjoy Zweig and others who may be looking for a new author to try.
A copy of this book was provided by the publisher through NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Across five novellas, Stefan Zweig probes the interior lives of his characters, particularly through the lens of passion.
In Burning Secret, a young baron makes a game out of trying to seduce a young mother at a countryside hotel only to reckon with her formidable and cunning son.
A Chess Story takes something as mundane as a chess match and puts it on par with some of the best sports dramas out there. An unconventional hero with a harrowing backstory goes toe to toe with a chess master in a game aboard a cruise ship.
After being discovered by her lover's girlfriend, a woman is blackmailed and pushed to the verge of madness in AFear.
Confusion is aptly named as a young lothario becomes obsessed with academics, particularly impassioned by his professor and the professor's wife as he gets caught in circumstances he finds hard to extricate himself from.
And finally in Journey Into the Past we see how a war separates two lovers and watch their awkward attempt to rekindle their passion after so much in their lives, and the world, has changed.
These five stories carried the weight of classics but had the readability of modern stories. They felt like tantalizing romances, cultural criticisms, and deep character studies all mixed together. Zweig is undoubtedly a master of prose. The sentences flow along like water and whisk you away. And wit a bit more substance than a short story without the commitment of a full novel, these five novellas were perfect companions for single sittings.
There are five novellas in this collection: A Burning Secret, A Chess Story, Fear, Confusion and Journey into the Past.
Most of these stories were written in the early part of the twentieth century – 1900 – 1920’s – and they have a real sense of a past world about them. However, what makes these novella’s still stand, is that the emotions felt by people don’t really change, whatever era they are written in. These stories encompass a whole range of feelings that we can all understand – ranging from adult secrets, obsession, jealousy, fear, longing, loss, pain and love…
Along the way, a boy grows up, a cruise ship sees a dramatic chess game, a married woman fears discovery after a brief affair, we read of forbidden love and of a romance separated by time and war. . I am pleased his writing has been re-discovered in recent years and it is easy to see why he was so popular. Zweig wrote beautifully – he is often criticised for being pedestrian, but what he does is actually tell a story and tell it well
This book collects five of Stefan Zweig’s novellas: Chess, Fear, Confusion, Journey Into The Past and Burning Secret.
I became a Zweig fan after first reading Chess a few years ago – little did I realise that that was his only good book and the rest of his output is very poor! I am a Zweig fan no longer.
Fear and Confusion are tied as the worst novellas here. Fear is about an upper-middle class woman called Irene who has an affair with a young piano teacher and is blackmailed by her lover’s ex to keep quiet about it. The guilt drives Irene mad, the point of the story being how suffering in silence rather than being caught and punished is worse, but the reveal at the end of what it was all about is plain ridiculous. Melodramatic piffle.
Confusion is about a university student who doesn’t realise he’s gay for his teacher. They write a book about Elizabethan theatre and then the teacher disappears. What does it mean?! Anyone with a brain will know but our narrator is, for all his supposed education, a dumbass. This was the longest novella in the book and it was insufferable. Hardly anything happens and the ending isn’t just obvious, it’s underwhelming and boring too. Like Fear, Confusion is contrived horseshit through and through.
Burning Secret is only slightly better than the previous two with a similar approach of having a naive narrator but at least this one is 12 years old and not some unconvincingly innocent twenty-something! The kid and his single mother go to a holiday resort where a raffish fellow called the Baron decides to score with his hot mama. The kid at first thinks the Baron’s his buddy but slowly realises he’s using him to get into his mommy’s pants so he decides to get his own back by being the ultimate cockblock! It’s such a dreary story full of the kind of observations you wonder who they’re there for – too simple for grown-up readers and there aren’t going to be kids reading this!
I didn’t dislike Journey Into the Past much but I didn’t like it either. It’s about a man and woman reunited years after having an affair who try to rekindle that passion. It’s a well-observed psychological romance with overtones of the impending war as the Nazis rise to power though on the whole it still feels slight, unremarkable, and, like all things Zweig, strangely unmoving despite the emphasis on emotion.
Chess remains the best thing of Zweig’s I’ve read. I’ve read it twice since 2010 and still really like it. It’s about the world chess champion being challenged – and beaten – by a mysterious opponent nobody has ever heard of. Zweig’s story returns back to the horrors of fascist Germany, taking the reader into a Gestapo holding cell where the mystery man is interrogated for months. Chilling and compelling, Chess is a brilliant novella and the only one in the collection I’d say is worth checking out.
Zweig is a fine prose stylist who wrote beautiful sentences but his penchant for melodrama and literary posturing leads too many times to overwrought silliness in his often quite bare narratives. The effect of which leads to some surprisingly empty stories lacking the emotional impact he describes his characters going through that the reader can’t feel. This isn’t a worthwhile collection to get – I’d recommend interested readers pick up Chess instead. It’s not only better but far shorter than wading through the other four novellas of sludge.
This particular review is only of the story Confusion. I have reviewed the previous stories separately.
Confusion is about a young man who becomes the student to a professor at the university he attends. The professor's expertise lies in Shakespeare's works. The student becomes obsessed with this professor and his work. Finally he rents a room in the same house the professor and his wife are living.
Things are strange. The wife is emotionally distant and sardonic. The professor is in turns, kind and gentle and caustic and cold. This puts the young man in turmoil. He doesn't know why the older man is treating him like this.
Also the professor takes to disappearing for a few days, telling no one of his whereabouts.
Furthering the mystery, his fellow students and the other professors have become cold toward the student and begun to exclude him from their circles.
Nothing is solved until the end, and I won't give it away, just to say, that I find so many things unrealistic and wrong about it.
Secrets. We have them, hide them and hedge them. Revelation results in a level of distress which we are not comfortable with. But sometimes even the most impenetrable of defences cannot hide them. Sometimes the secret itself burns the keeper from within, so much so that the only relief is release. Zweig is a master craftsman, building up stories around characters with secrets, dissecting their thoughts and feelings, exposing them in their behaviours and actions. Within each character is a complex sea of feelings to navigate. Amidst the internal conflicts and emotional turmoil, there is the universal question: Is this love? Or even what is love? The answer is not so straightforward, especially when it is a forbidden relationship. Compounding the confusion are feelings of guilt and shame, fear and anxiety. Can there be absolution or resolution?
Burning Secret
This is the bildungsroman of twelve year old Edgar, his coming of age story. The story is simple, but the relationships are not. Because of a previous carnal indiscretion by his father, the relationship between his parents grows cold. Although Edgar may be close to his mother, she is detached and isolated from him. She hides her loneliness and desperation behind a facade. Along comes the predator, the Baron, who beguiles both Edgar and Mama. Soon her defences fall, and she ventures to walk on the wild side. This has deep repercussions on Edgar as he embarks on a stormy emotional journey, from loneliness, to happiness, confusion, frustration, betrayal, anger, desperation, despair and reconciliation.
“He had lost all his impatience with life now that he knew how full of promise it was. He felt as if, for the first time, he had seen it as it was, no longer enveloped in the thousand lies of childhood, but naked in its own dangerous beauty. He had never thought that days could be so full of alternating pain and pleasure, and he liked the idea that many such days lay ahead of him, that a whole life was waiting to reveal its secret to him. A first premonition of the rich variety of life had come to him; for the first time he thought he had understood the nature of human beings – they needed each other even when they appeared hostile, and it was very sweet to be loved by them. He was unable to think of anything or anyone with hatred, he did not regret anything, and found a new sense of gratitude even to the Baron, the seducer, his bitterest enemy, because he had opened the door to this world of his first true emotions to him.”
If there is one thing to learn from this story, it is that marital relationships (or extra-marital), have the most profound effect on children.
A Chess Story
Already reviewed in “A Game of Chess and Other Stories”.
Fear
Irene had it all; a prosperous, professional husband, two children, a comfortable home with servants, a bourgeois lifestyle. Why put it all at risk in an extra-marital affair with a Don Juan she is not even attracted to? She does so and spends all her waking hours in fear. Fear of being discovered. Fear of losing what she had. Guilt each time she faces her husband. The burden is so great that it brings her close to confession, even to suicide. It is compounded by a stalker, a blackmailer, who threatens to shatter her perfect little world in an instant.
”She lay with her eyes closed to relish, at a deeper level, her real life or what it was, and it was now her happiness too. Something still hurt her, deep inside, but it was a promising pain, burning but mild, just as wounds burn when scar tissue is about to close over them forever.”
The story is as much about the consequences of infidelity, the burden of guilt as it is about love and forgiveness.
Confusion
A young protégé tries to make up for his earlier dissolute, misspent youth when an enigmatic professor takes him under his wing. He builds a relationship with his professor, and also with his professor’s wife. He immerses himself so deeply in his academic pursuits, such that he was oblivious to the real pursuit that was going on.
Journey into the Past
Another young protégé with great determination to be a success falls head over heels for his benefactor’s wife. Fate had other ideas and he is dispatched half way around the world to further his career. Although they are separated by thousands of miles and for nine long years, it is an invisible, unbreachable, moral and social wall which keeps them from consummating their love. Still he is haunted by the pleasant memories of their time together. When they finally have their reunion, the great void of distance and time disappears, and everything seemed to be as it was. They are older, but the feelings remain. The world outside is in chaos, but inside, nothing has changed.
Dans le vieux parc solitaire et glacé Deux spectres cherchent le passé.
In the old park, in ice and snow caught fast Two spectres walk, still searching for the past.
This story is beautiful, nostalgic and poignant, a perfect ending for this collection of novellas.
Reading stories or novels as part of a collection inevitably influences how you read them and what you take from them. For me, it tends to go one of two ways: some stories are sapped of their power by proximity to other, related stories. Stories can interfere with each other, like waveforms cancelling each other out. Or the waveforms can align, amplifying the power of each individual story, and creating a whole greater than the sum of its parts—as in The Collected Novellas of Stefan Zweig.
Each of these five novellas is thrown into relief by the stories around it. The obsessive, over-heated quality of Zweig’s prose, which can feel tawdry or overdramatic taken one story at a time, becomes increasingly fascinating and nuanced with each additional novella. Settings—hotels and train stations and ocean liners—that might feel generic, taken one story at a time, aggregate into a kind of shadow world of unstable spaces, of worlds in motion. The stories with a strong political subtext—Journey into the Past and Chess Story—bring out the politics in the others, while adultery, which occurs in four of the five stories, settles into the background where it belongs, the primary concern of not a single one.
I reviewed separately Burning Secret, Fear, Confusion, and Journey into the Past. Chess Story is deservedly famous—brilliant, thought-provoking, and surprising. But for some reason, it has resisted my powers as a reviewer. I simply can not seem to come up with anything interesting to say about it.
Mučilo me koju ocenu da dam, ali nažalost ovaj put ide samo dobar, 3. Volim Cvajga mnooogo, Beware of Pity obožavam, a Chess Story je verovatno jedna od mojih omiljenih kratkih priča. ALI... ova zbirka priča je bila samo... mnjeh (u nedostatku boljeg opisa).
Zbirka se sastoji od 7 novela (da, podvlačim i ovde, čitala sam novo Lagunino izdanje koje nije uneto na GR u trenutku pisanja ove rece) koje su mi sve bile za trunku (il' dve) previše patetične i preopširne. Dopale su mi se ideje i tematike koje Cvajg obrađuje (ponekad VRLO skandalozne za njegovo vreme), ali on to oduži na 10 strana previše i nekako se izgubi jačina poruke jer samo želim da poentira a ne da mi naniže pet prideva jedan do drugog i tako ukrug. Hvatala sam sebe više puta kako proveravam koliko stranica imam do kraja.
Ovo je mogla da bude baš sjajna zbirka, ali nažalost mi nijedna priča nije zasijala (možda eventualno Burning Secret, mada je i tu bio preopširan).
This collection of five novellas—A Burning Secret, A Chess Story, Fear, Confusion, and Journey into the Past—showcases the depth and emotional precision that define Stefan Zweig’s writing. Mostly written in the early 20th century, these works capture a mood of nostalgia while probing the complexities of human emotion.
Each story approaches its theme with psychological intensity: a boy’s uneasy transition into adolescence, a battle of minds over a chessboard on a cruise ship, a married woman consumed by the consequences of a brief affair, and lovers caught in the grip of time, distance, and war. Zweig deftly reveals the vulnerabilities of his characters—whether rooted in jealousy, obsession, longing, or fear—while maintaining a subtle, understated style.
At times melancholic and at others quietly devastating, these novellas remind readers why Zweig remains one of the most insightful chroniclers of passion and loss in modern literature.
I've read enough Zweig to notice a pattern, or a structure of his stories: the main character gets caught in some kind of psychological situation where their nerves are tested, and the tension builds as events escalate, and Zweig, going on a quest to explore the deepest level of the human mind, pushes the story toward a final resolution.
That pattern works well for his short stories and novels, but not quite as well for a novella. His short stories usually go ay perfect pacing, and the "psychological situation" presented are extraordinary: one hardly expects those situations in their daily life but somehow they're perfectly reasonable. His novels, while longer, still give just enough to keep you curious and turning the page.
His novellas, however, often feel lengthy in parts, and didn’t really urge me to explore the tension further. I was totally lost in Confusion, where there’s just an endless flow of words to describe something so small, and it never seems to move on to the next point. Naturally, I’m not an impatient reader, but at times I couldn’t shake the feeling that Zweig was going nowhere with the story.
Would I recommend this book? Well yes, the stories are still very much in Zweig’s style. But I’d suggest taking them one at a time, not all five in a row.
I'm not a fan of novellas or short stories or short fiction in any form. If I like something that I'm reading, I want to spend time with it and not have to adjust to a new story within a few pages or hours or however long the work lasts. That disclaimer noted, I enjoyed "The Collected Novellas" of Stefan Zweig very much and imagine that I'll be tackling his other Pushkin Press books (even "The Collected Stories") at some point soon.
Each of these novellas is a story about longing and the need for physical and/or spiritual connection. Yet human fallibility - whether it be a lack of honesty, lack of clarity, or lack of consideration for the needs of another - creates the crackling tension and undeniable allure of these stories. I'm not surprised that Zweig was one of the most celebrated writers of the 1920s and 1930s. His writing feels fresh, relevant, and still compelling almost a century later.
A collection of five of Stefan Zweig's thoughtful, emotional, and psychological novellas.
Book Review:The Collected Novellas of Stefan Zweig is a small treasure from the ever brilliant Pushkin Press. This was my introduction to the work of Stefan Zweig (1881-1942) and what a wonderful introduction it was. Five varied novellas from throughout his career: Fear (1910/1920), Burning Secret (1913), Confusion (1927), A Chess Story (1942), and Journey into the Past (1976). A Chess Story (his masterpiece) and Burning Secret are the best of the bunch, both unique and creative visionary works. Confusion (also known as Confusion of Feelings) is more average, at least to today's eyes, although it is a story with a message. It may have been more meaningful and powerful if I could have read it in 1927. Fear (aka Angst) and Journey into the Past are "smaller" works, each focusing on a narrower point and verging on melodrama. One-note works. In fairness, both do full justice to their vision. Both are stories with a heart and more emotion and feeling is better than less. The novella was Zweig's most effective art form. He made his stories just as long as they needed to be. Even in The Collected Stories not all of the works are "short stories." Zweig's specialty, his chosen subject, is a mix of the romantic (in all senses of the word), emotions, and psychology. What could be called "human nature." He finds the depths in the people he writes about, often considering the many possibilities a particular stress, pressure, or trauma might create. If they venture into the sentimental, so be it. All five works in The Collected Novellas of Stefan Zweig were ably and excellently translated by Anthea Bell. Although I don't speak German, having translated manuscripts I'm aware of the possible flaws (especially my own) in this secondary art. When reading translated works there are usually a number of "Is that the right word?" moments, indicating some (almost inevitable) communication breakdown between translator and author. There are few, if any at all, of these moments in the sensitive and capable hands of Ms. Bell. This diverse collection gives the reader a quick and valuable introduction to the range of Stefan Zweig's work. All these novellas have stuck with me. [5★]
One of the most wonderful things I've ever ever read. That I ever hope to read. I don't see it on my friends reading lists but it should be for many reason, not the least of which is the spellbindingly virtuosic translation by Anthea Bell. READ IT READ IT READ IT. And if you find this little volume by Pushkin Press, it is a delight to hold and handle. Thank you PV for turning me on to Sweig! I didn't want it to end.
Stefan Zweig was one of the most popular writers of early twentieth-century Europe. After his books were banned and burned under Hitler and Zweig and his wife escaped to Brazil, where they committed suicide, he fell out of favor and his work essentially disappeared. Thanks to the amazing work of publishers like the New York Review of Books Classics and the Pushkin Press, writers like Zweig have come back to us (and it doesn’t hurt that Wes Anderson was inspired by Zweig to make Grand Budapest Hotel) and what an amazing rediscovery he offers. Zweig feels like the greatest chronicler of Freud’s Vienna, a world of bourgeois sexual repressions and class tensions. If Ibsen had written novels and short stories set in Mitteleuropa, they might look like this. What it really comes down to, though, is this: Zweig is a pure pleasure to read. Though he explores the same territory of miscommunication and self-deception as modernists like Ford Madox Ford, Zweig’s talents lie less in experimental narrative than in the construction of character and story. I am a slow reader, and I gulp these things down, compulsively. And I don’t want to stop. I’ve bought more books by the man. But this shouldn’t imply these are shallow. Far from it. Zweig gets the depths of humanity and conveys them beautifully. His posthumous novel, The Post-Office Girl, is a powerful, semi-revolutionary novel of class desperation that I highly recommend, but the five novellas offered in this collection have been the truest of reading pleasures, especially "A Chess Story," "Fear" and "Confusion." Much credit must also be given to the brilliant translator Anthea Bell. Plus, the Pushkin hardback volume is simply a joy to hold in your hands and cradle. It just feels like a book, if you know what I mean. I cannot recommend this enough. Welcome back Stefan Zweig.
“The Burning Secret.” Very good. Starts from the perspective of a Baron on the prowl to get in the sack with a married woman and switches to the perspective of her 12-year-old son. Shifts from a light and humorous aspect to a darker perspective with more pathos and insights. A coming-of-age story of sorts.
“A Chess Story.” Perhaps the most famous story in there, I enjoyed it quite a bit. Like “The Burning Secret” it starts as a light-hearted tale being innocently-enough related and takes a turn to the darkly psychological.
"Fear." Didn't care for too much. The ending is ludicrous.
"Confusion." the longest of any of the novellas – was particularly interesting in many ways, especially for something published in 1927.
"Journey into the Past" is the shortest of the novellas. A nice little bittersweet mitteleuropa love story.
I enjoy Zweig's writing, but I think he over-writes a little. It seems to take him a thousand words to say what could be said in a hundred, and often with overheated, florid prose. We get the point well before he beats it into the ground. His stories are psychological, exploring the inner thoughts of the protagonists – and they’re typically very turbulent thoughts. Still, I found them all engaging enough to read them through to the end.
Reading Zweig is like sitting down to a perfect, elegant, Viennese pastry. Each piece is so carefully crafted. But it's the vivid and deeply worked psychology of the characters that stops this all just being so much fluff. Zweig is a humanist, deeply interested in the ideas of Freud as well as the hidden passageways of the human psyche. This lends his works a dream-like quality, though the writing is deliberate and well considered, like a pointillist painting. Those looking for low-hanging fruit might chafe at the length of time and the care Zweig invests in setting out his stories. I certainly skimmed unashamedly the parts where characters start to waffle or gush at immoderate length. I remember that Zeig was writing for a much more severely stratified and repressed time than our own. A world of order, security, and (for the upper middle classes) reputation. A world that was to have the stuffing comprehensively knocked out of it in not just one but two world wars so close together. Something that Zweig witnessed first hand: the loss of innocence and naive faith in human progress. And this is for me where Zweig speaks to our own times most directly, for civilisation is indeed a very thin veneer (and has become thinner!) and human nature continues underneath it. The final litmus test: do you remember the stories afterwards? Do they come back and taunt or tease you? With Zweig and for me, yes! Five stars!
a sublime experience :– Zweig is a compelling writer and the novellas in this collection are all very well-written and moving; most of them shocking and haunting, others tender and soothing. he deals much in desire, longing, beauty and motives -- many unspoken, unconscious, but equally volcanic -- the real and rather-melodramatically tragic charm of the bourgeoisie.
reunião de cinco obras de zweig, escritas em momentos diferentes da sua vida. já conhecia "a chess story" e "confusion", mas bastava um qualquer desconhecido ter escrito as outras três novelas ("a burning secret", "fear" e "journey into the past"), obras-primas absolutas, para ganhar um lugar eterno no olimpo da literatura. um diálogo ou uma descrição assinados por zweig valem mais do que obras completas da maioria dos outros. se há alguém que eu gostaria de poder imitar - na sua prosa densa e luminosa ao mesmo tempo, na maneira de narrar uma história, na construção dos personagens, na sua escolha do adjectivo perfeito - era ele. um dos livros do ano (e dos para sempre).
Completely unmissable! One of my favourite authors, I sometimes feel sad and guilty that I've devoured another of this collections/books so quickly, given that such a powerful and astute mind has written comparatively little.
His story is tragic, yet he finds the beauty and complexity in all around him.
A well-written collection of stories. The characters are full of anguish and torment as they wrestle with their longings. Zweig was a humanist, and there is little sense of morality- and ultimately, no satisfaction or conclusions- here. But valuable to see the struggle of man and realize the end is not in himself. My full review here: http://notesfromthefallen.blogspot.co...
almost broke my self-imposed rule and gave this 5/5. incredible story-telling/tension, wild that most of these are from ~100 years ago. Zweig’s/the translator’s vocabulary is out of my league but that’s why we have dictionaries lol. Confusion did what a picture of dorian gray tried to do, openly!!! big fan