In Twenty-four Hours in the Life of a Woman , the dramatic disappearance of the wife of a wealthy businessman from a small hotel on the French Riviera prompts a distinguished English widow to recount her fleeting encounter with a young aristocrat many years before in Monte Carlo. In The Royal Game, a tantalizing encounter takes place between the reigning world chess champion and an unknown passenger on a cruise ship bound for Buenos Aires. The stranger's diffident manner masks his extraordinary ability to challenge the grand master in a game of chess but also conceals his dark and damaged past, the horror of which emerges as the game unfolds.
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.
In the late 1930s a man sat down to write a book for a woman who wouldn't be born for many decades, and wouldn't read it for many more. This book belongs only to me. I'm going to go cry in my room. Happy New Year.
Made a brief pause between all fantasy and YA things I now read to try to remember something that we've been studying at school. This was like a gulp of fresh air. I never understood Zweig back at school, and I now see why. "Twenty Four Hours in the Life of a Woman" is an ornate depiction of the difficulties of human psychology in a labyrinth grown by social standards of the time. All this just makes the emotions and feelings more and more intense, vivid, sharp.
Once again, Zweig at his best! Two short episodes from human life masterfully developed into attention-captivating and breath-taking novels. The topic of unhealthy game addiction (casino games and chess) passing like a red thread through both stories made it only reasonable to merge them in one book. But the stories touch on much more than that, the ability to understand before (or better still, instead) of judging being another one on the list of issues in focus. And to add to this, Zweig shows his genius skill of describing human actions and the accompanying inner thoughts and emotions enabling one to see them as if in slow motion. The image of the game and the tension of game players was so vivid that I got absorbed too, with the resultant feeling of the blood throbbing in the temples. Highly recommended!
Bilinmeyen Bir Kadının Mektup'un üzerimde bıraktığı etkiyi bırakmadı ama yine de çok severek okudum. Yavaş yavaş bu yazarın diğer kitaplarını da okumak istiyorum. Kitaplarının hafif kasvetli havası ve güçlü kadınları yazma şekli çok hoşuma gidiyor
Stefan Zweig, who penned, in my opinion, the most definitive biography of Marie Antoinette, has written another masterpiece in his short novella of "Twenty Fours Hours in the Life of a Woman." The story is told in the narrative style from a lady friend of Mrs. "C." Mrs. C is a wealthy widow of 42. Her husband died two years earlier. Both of her sons are grown. Mrs. C first meets this young man of 24 in the Casino at Monte Carlo. He is losing badly. She continues to watch and stare at him. She admires his youth and good looks. After he has lost all his money he wonders out onto the beach and settles down on a nearby bench. She follows him there, and then notices he has a revolver in hand. She becomes alarmed, and worries that this young man will harm himself. She approaches him and starts a conversation with him. He is from a noble family from Poland. Mrs. C convinces him to accompany her to a hotel where he can sleep for the night. While there makes an offer to him that if he swears off gambling for ever and returns to his family she will settles his gambling debts and fund his return home; he agrees. This novella was about a woman who assumed that passion has long since died, and had been revived by a brief encounter with a twenty-four year old man.
An excellent drama exploring the ways of the heart in old Europe, but not without enough dry passages of over-visualizing the nothingness that can happen in such a story, pages of watching a man not move on a park bench, or pages of descriptions of hands at a gambling table. Well written, no doubt, and the ending is worth the brief journey, but this particular outing is like a fine wine that's a bit too dry for my taste, hence the three out of five.
A very interesting read. It's one of those stories that definitely made me feel something, but I can't yet pinpoint what exactly it made me feel. I will need more time to let this novella simmer in my brain. I feel like this book will probably live in my head rent-free for a little while. I liked Zweig's writing a lot, and I will definitely take a look at his other works.
Amazing book about our life and our feelings. The book shows us how human get slave of feelings. Everybody needs to read the book, because it help you control yourself.
Se disfruta mucho. Zweig nos da una perspectiva nueva sobre lo que se considera empáticamente correcto, y hasta donde llega el ser humano a consecuencia de sus acciones.
El reconocimiento, el ser visto, sentirse olvidado y asustado son elementos que se abordan.
Two novellas by German author Zweig. And they seem incredibly well translated.
Twenty-four hours is quite simply a story a woman tells a listener (and the readers) of 24 hours of her life in which she behaved rather uncharacteristically. The story really is rather simple but it is so beautifully written and so engaging that i read the novella in one sitting. Not a huge task, but considering all the other demands i have right now, an accolade to the writing.
The tale is actually about addiction and passion; deceit of others and of the self; hope and foolhardiness; and ultimately, about the separateness of us all. It’s about one woman’s hope that she could make a difference and her realisation that perhaps none of us can; about how society dictates and may not always be right. And about how the constraints of society, while exhilarating to flaunt, are almost impossible to truly escape.
While these are always arresting themes in a book, what makes this story so much more valuable is that this novella was first published in 1944, but Zweig died in ’42 so it was probably written in the 30s. Progressive thinker he was in the creation of his protagonist.
The Royal Game is, predictably, about chess. Or so it seems. Again, the story starts and seems to be about one thing and then isn’t. In this novella, a dim-witted idiot savant is discovered to be a chess genius. The story diverges from him when the narrator encounters him on a ship and tries to arrange an accidental meeting over a chess board. And so is introduced perhaps the ‘real’ story of the novella. Or perhaps not. It’s hard to decide.
This story raises the question of the difference between pride and a self-destructive inability to lose, obsession and addiction, single mindedness and monomania. It looks at chess as a motif for the ways in which we construct and conduct our lives; and the ways in which others, more powerful, do that for us.
Interesting stuff and also a hugely readable and engaging story.
I also really love the way this man writes – in some ways it is so old fashioned as to be a breath of fresh air.
‘Visitors who had come to see their friends scurried hither and thither, page boys with caps smartly cocked slithered through the public rooms shouting names snappily,...’
I loved both of these novellas and am glad to found Zwieg.
I cannot begin to express how the writings of Zweig never cease to astound me, to submerge me into some kind of catharsis that I wouldn’t dare refuse. His understanding of passion, desperation and anxiety – of what is inherent to the human spirit itself – can only come from a man who himself had been found hopeless and, as we can all guess by now, on the brink of despair. I strongly recommend this short yet profound novel (like “Chess story”, it should not be missed).
Expected better from Zweig. The psychological insight was precise and clear but the prose was wordy and circular and at times I kept picturing an ouroboros. That's what this story was like, a snake eating it's own tail. Puzzling and unnecessary. Even tough it was short, could have been much shorter.
Two novellas by the Austrian author Zweig, who knows how to portray troubled minds beautifully. Twenty Four Hours ... deals with passions, addiction and moral views of society who would condemn a woman for the choices she makes. The Royal Game deals with another sort of passion or addiction which plays havoc on a chess player's mind. Brilliantly written.
“But, I have just said it, all suffering is cowardly: it recoils before the power of will-life which is anchored more strongly in our flesh than all the passion of death is in our mind.”
Twenty Four Hours in the Life of a Woman by Stefan Zweig Mesmerizing book
This is an exceptional work. One could say a chef d’oeuvre… However, writing a note about it presents a challenge… - How to write about the most impressive aspects without resorting to the plot? - One way out is of course to include a spoiler alert, and that may have to be inserted There is a strange thread in some of the last books that I have read. - Suicide is at the center of the plot, or a very important issue-it makes sense after all In The Heart of the Matter, by the august Graham Greene, the only way out of an impossible conundrum is taking one’s life…in fact, two personages kill themselves. Then, in the Pulitzer Prize Winner The Executioner’s Song by the acclaimed Norman Mailer, we have again an attempted double suicide.
- There’s one way out of the confusion- I am not revealing much from the current book - Instead, there are some clues to what happens in others - An eventual reader of this note would be interested in Twenty Four Hours and not in The Song
The book starts with some events that take place at a hotel by the sea, where various characters appear to move to the center stage. There is a married woman, who is on vacation with her husband and daughter- or does she have two? That notwithstanding, I was expecting the story of the philandering woman and her lover to develop and that we would follow her. - But we don’t - Instead, we focus on two other guests An older woman is intrigued by the acceptance with which one of the visitors meets the runaway wife. But that encourages her to start confessing her own Twenty Four Hours in her life. The events took place decades ago, after the death of the woman’s husband that had caused a depression. The older lady felt helpless and unnecessary after her spouse had died, with her grown children not needing her anymore. - Indeed, nobody seemed to care for her She went to a casino, where she did something remarkable, starting to study the hands of people and not their faces. She claims that we can say much more- everything actually- by looking at the hands that are so different from one another - Imagine that! I find it surprising Then there is a young man. The association with this guy has ups and downs. Very high points and an extremely low crater. As mentioned at the start, I have trouble in saying what had a considerable impact in the story- and that is what happens. I would make a reference in my native tongue. Fat chance that you know this tongue... A proverb goes something like this: - Pe cine nu lasi sa moara, nu te lasa sa traiesti It does not really give away the clue to the entire tale and if anybody is really interested, they can find the translation…even if google can sometimes hide the meaning and not give it, with its crazy rendering. A local sage said that proverbs are sort of stupid, so even that saying is not really shedding any light on the Twenty Four Hours.
Included on the Le Monde list of best one hundred novels of the last century, I found the novel mesmerizing.
What a pleasant little story! For sure, “Twenty Four Hours in the Life of a Woman” is a delightful novella, and if I read it its original language, German, which could have taken away some of the poetry since I did not necessarily understood every word I was reading, it still constitutes a very pleasant and distracting reading.
The novella takes place in a hotel, where the narrator meets Mrs. C., an elder lady who decides to share with him a particular part of her life she experienced during her stay in Monte Carlo. She indeed encountered there a very special man, decades ago, as she was a middle-aged widow suffering from deep boredom and loneliness after the death of her beloved husband. In a hundred pages or so, she explains her meeting with a mesmerizing stranger addicted to gamble, who change her life in just 24 hours. Through the pages, her narrative takes us to the genuine ambiance of the French Riviera, where passions are unleashed, and where the characters seem to flirt constantly with despair and death. Both glamourous and gloomy, Mrs. C. ‘s story tackles very vast subject such as addiction, gambling, and respectability questions, but approach at the same time a broader questioning around moral and ethics.
It is overall a very charming story. The universe described by Mrs. C. , whose epicentre is a casino gambling table, is genuinely unique, and bathes the reader into an old and glamourous ambiance charming and repulsive in the same time when it arouses addictions amid the player. The writing is fluid, the descriptions are both pure and detailed, and Mrs. C. truly succeeds in describing those 24 hours which changed her life forever.
Moreover, the novella tackles issues such as the “respectability” of a woman, it mocks the moral perfection expected from them, and constitutes both the apology and the deep critic of passions when they are erected as key words. It succeeds furthermore to explore the feelings inside a woman’s heart, and the dynamics which could lead her to choose passion over reason.
I would therefore recommend this book to everybody seeking for a nice, easy and distracting reading. If it didn’t mark me as much as others, it still constitutes a very pleasing novella. Moreover, the format of 180 pages (more or less) is very well chosen: it permits a synthetic storytelling, without actually making of this novella a 30-pages narrative, which would have been sincerely saddening!
“I secretly wished for a pause in which to recover from feelings that had been too violently aroused.”
That and many other lines stayed with me. I'm a woman, I am a sensitive and deeply emotional being. Within the book, I felt through some lines, my ways of seeing life and sensing it more than anything else.
That being said, I have to admit that I Just finished reading this. It was recommended to me by a beloved friend who although I recently just met, I have an inkling feeling that he'll stay there with me as I will for him. Distance has separated us, therefore you might now understand why some parts of this book hurt deeply, more than I could have anticipated. Amidst this, here is my not so well crafted review:
Such a delicate, tenderness piece of art, filled with just enough words so that it does not become monotonous but profoundly exact. Zweig's portray of a woman's heart for just one day, its impeccable, as a woman myself, I saw through the main character's story my heart. Feelings tend to turn us into beasts, but also into gentle and tender beings, it is when passion becomes profoundly painful, that our tender ways of seeing life, make the worst out of us, but in the long run, it is those troubled stories that turn our memories into beautiful but everlasting hurtful narratives, narratives that will eventually be passed by us onto those that will make us turn ourselves back into those stories. And then again, the beauty of bringing ourselves back into those moments, and sharing them with others, it is that somehow, in the end, by forces of nature that seem to expand in ways that this ordinary life could explain, the pain will be relived as well as relieved.
I really enjoyed this. It is very short (which I did not realize when I purchased the ebook). Zweig was very talented. The gist of this (SPOILER) is a "scandal" occurs at a resort on French Riviera as one of the married wives leaves her husband for a younger, charming playboy type (that she met only days earlier). As the rest of the resort guests (familiar with one another as per familiar circles) gossip on the situation, the first protagonist defends the infidelity as an uncontrollable passion. As the other guests are appalled at this take, an unexpected defender emerges. A staid, respected elderly widow.
From this, the widow takes an opportunity the next day to invite the protagonist to her room to tell her about an event she herself experienced decades before at a Monte Carlo casino.
Eine sehr interessante Novelle, die finde ich persönlich die Spontanität des Menschen gut darstellt und auch zeigt wie bedeutsam oder nicht bedeutsam diese für einen persönlich sein können. An sich würde ich die Geschichte makellos finden, aber Zweig geht viel zu viel darauf ein das dies ja 24 Stunden einer Frau sind und es scheint so, als ob diese Charakterzüge nur Frauen zustehe nach Zweig.Ich finde dieser Abenteuerliche Geist ist eher etwas was mit Mensch-sein zu tun hat und nicht Frau-sein.
Perhaps meant originally as a study of human passion and addiction, it just comes across as a little sad that a person would suffer 20 or so years for a sexual liaison where she surrendered to her passion drawn in by an addicted youth she meant to save.
Seems more of an essay than a novella or short story. Easy to read in one sitting.
Zamanın tabılarıyla oynayan inanılmaz bir kitap. Bir kadın olmayı hatta hassas bir insan olmanın zorluklarını gözlemleyebildim. Almancadan İngilizce çevirimi gayet iyi olmuş. %70 anladım. Anlamadığım yerler gösteriyor ki son derece titiz bir edebiyatla yazılmış.
ده اول كتاب اخلصه السنة دى و حقيقى مبسوطة انا مقراتش للكاتب ده قبل كدة، لكن حبيت فكره الرواية اوى، و ازاى قدر يوصف مشاعر الست بسهولة، حبيت فكره انه اننا ممكن نحكم على تصرفات ناس من بره لكن لو اتحطينا فى نفس ظروفهم هنعمل زيهم، فيها افكار و مشاعر و تفاصيل كتيرة و جميلة رغم صغر الرواية