
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Vagabond Voices
FORMAT: Paperback
ISBN: 9781908251282
RRP: £8.95
PAGES: 152
PUBLICATION DATE:
May 19, 2014
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Klaus
Klaus is a novella that recounts the last days of Klaus Mann’s life, while referring back to the trials of the Mann family (Klaus being Thomas Mann’s son) and Klaus’s own autobiographical novel, Mephisto, one of his better known works partly because it was banned in West Germany for decades. This unlocks his relationship with both his father and his former lover, Gustaf, who was a communist before collaborating with the Nazi regime and becoming one of its most celebrated actors. On his return to Germany after the war, Klaus was outraged to see that Gustaf had now switched seamlessly to the post-war regime, and was once more the darling of the theatre world. Klaus, who had been isolated as both a homosexual and an anti-fascist, felt that Germans or rather those Germans in prominent positions were refusing to acknowledge their culpability. His isolation was now complete.
Reviews of Klaus
"Allan Massie is a master storyteller, with a particular gift for evoking the vanishing world of the European man of letters. His poignant novella about Klaus Mann bears comparison with his subject's best work." – Scottish Review of Books
Allan Massie
Allan Massie, one of Scotland’s foremost literary figures, was born in Singapore in 1938, grew up in Aberdeenshire and read history at Cambridge. He has published 23 works of fiction and nine of non-fiction, which include a string of highly successful historical novels. Perhaps his most masterly works are those set in contemporary society, which confront a wide range of difficult moral problems: The Death of Men, A Question of Loyalties (winner of the 1989 Saltire Society Book of the Year Award), Shadows of Empire, Surviving and, of course, The Sins of the Father. He is also one of Scotland’s most respected political commentators and a prolific journalist whose book reviews always reflect his deep understanding of the art of writing.