Have you ever enjoyed reading about the life of a writer who is not among your favorites? I am not a big fan of Thomas Mann, but for whatever reason, books that address him and his family work quite well for me. A few years ago, I read a book about his son, Cursed Legacy: The Tragic Life of Klaus Mann, and learned some things from it, not just about Klaus, but also about those tumultuous times.
The Magician is a fictionalized account of Thomas Mann's life. The author covers his entire life, offering some interesting tidbits about his siblings, wife, and children. The book owes its title to the sobriquet that Thomas's eldest children, Erika and Klaus, gave him. They called him the Magician. This reminds me of The Magic Mountain, the only Thomas Mann novel I really enjoyed. It was immersive, funny, and depressing all at the same time. But I digress.
Although this one is a fictionalized interpretation, the book is well-sourced. The author devotes a great deal of time to searching for parallels between real life and the characters and events in Thomas's novels.
Thomas married Katia Pringsheim, a young woman from a wealthy and creative family. Katia and Thomas went on to have six children. Thomas comes across as a controversial and rather aloof father who both supported his children's talents and inclinations and evoked conflicting and far from positive emotions in them as adults. His relationship with his son Klaus seems to have been particularly complex.
Growing up, Thomas's children benefited from the creative atmosphere at their home in Munich. The family had a tradition of reading books together. The children fondly remember their mother, father, or grandmother reading aloud works by Shakespeare, Dickens, and Gogol.
Meanwhile, Thomas would shut himself up in his study for several hours. He needed solitude to work. The children were afraid to bother him while he was supposed to be working and thinking.
Thomas had homosexual tendencies, and this is reflected in some of his works.
Although Thomas considered himself rather apolitical and was much more interested in culture and ideas, he initially supported the First World War and the German cause. His views changed when he saw how the war was turning out and how much suffering it brought about.
Thomas witnessed the eddies of intolerance and hatred in his country when the Nazis came to power. He and Katia, had little choice but to emigrate, first to Switzerland and then to the United States.
After leaving Germany, the author of Buddenbrooks found himself at a crossroads. He was an esteemed novelist who had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. This made his opinions on politics and current affairs valuable in the eyes of many. He was expected to express his anti-Nazi views openly, but Thomas hesitated. He was appalled by Nazism, but he feared losing his German-speaking readers if his books were banned.
His older brother, Heinrich Mann, also a talented writer and socially engaged intellectual, as well as his eldest daughter, Erika, and son, Klaus, were much more outspoken about politics. Finally, in 1936, Thomas felt ready to burn his bridges and make a public statement against Hitler and his regime.
Thomas wrote in a letter to his brother Heinrich in February 1936: "Above all, however, it became a psychological necessity for me to express my opinion, if in measured words, to the scoundrels in power, and to let them know that I do not fear their vengeance. I believe I’ve not done badly in choosing the moment, and feel better since I did it. If they do expel me and ban my books, then I’ll be able to say to myself that either there will be a war in a year and a half or two — or conditions will have to have changed in the same period, such that my books can be circulated again."
Everything still seemed uncertain to Thomas and many others at that point.
Ultimately, Tóibín's book is about a large, gifted family who lived through challenging and dangerous times. They were products of their time and place, yet they often defied their times, changed places, and rebelled against conventional morality. They left a rich literary legacy. Not just Thomas, but also his brother and his children created texts and explored ideas that continue to make waves today. Thomas's youngest son was a talented musician.
The story of this family was marked by tragedies that left scars on those who survived them. Both of Thomas's sisters committed suicide, as did his son Klaus.
Some criticized Thomas for his attitude after his eldest son's death. He did not attend the funeral, and he reportedly did not appear distressed when he went to the opera soon after. Who knows how he felt inside?
Heinrich Mann's second wife, Nelly, also took her own life. His first wife, Mimi (Maria Kanova), a Czech actress with Jewish roots, was sent by the Nazis to a concentration camp.
The author poignantly recounts how the Mann brothers reacted to their sister Carla's suicide.
"They [Heinrich and Thomas] approached her bedroom. Some things had been removed in the immediate aftermath of her death. There was no sign of the glass she had filled with water in order to gargle. No sign either of any clothes or jewelry. The bed had been made. On the bedside table there was a copy of Shakespeare’s Love’s Labour’s Lost. Carla must, Thomas thought, have been planning a part in some production of the play. He noticed that her suitcase was in a corner of the room. And when Heinrich opened the wardrobe Carla’s clothes were hanging there. It felt as if she could have walked into the room at any moment, ready to ask her two brothers what they were doing."
Although I think one might enjoy this book regardless of whether they have read Thomas Mann's works, being familiar with some of them definitely helps. Some may find the writing style rather dry and emotionally restrained, and Thomas's portrayal lacking in depth. In a way, this was an undramatic rendering of dramatic events against a dramatic backdrop.
Reading about Thomas Mann has given me the incentive to try more of his stories. I am thinking about A Man and his Dog.
3.75 stars