The World of Yesterday
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Stefan Zweig and the Holocaust
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Isaac
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rated it 4 stars
Oct 27, 2014 07:58PM

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Prochnik details Zweig's expatriate experience upon leaving Austria in 1936, time spent in England and the US to his death in Brazil. A worthwhile read for anyone interested in the life of Zweig.

Hope you find Impossible Exile as engrossing as I.

Prochnik details Zweig's expatriate experience upon leaving Austria in 1936, time spent..."
Thanks David for your recommendation.
I have just started Prochnik book. I'm enjoying his work because it is interesting, entertaining and also departs from the normal style of biographies. In its way, Pochnick intends to follow Zweig's approach as biographer.
Certainly for those that admired Zweig as a writer, Prochnik provides us with a biographical framework that helps to understand better the motives and the reasons behind this outstanding and prolific author


To understand the human mind is a quite complex task. Moreover, if we tried to find the reasons to explain the Zweig's' suicide.
To be an exiled must be a hard and difficult experience because all personal roots and attachments are broken. But I believe that this situation is even worse, as happened with Zweig, when the exiled is certain that those roots and the world where he lived, have been destroyed for ever. In that respect, it is interesting to notice that the first chapter of Zweig's memories is about the world of security that from his perspective prevailed prior the first World War.
I assume that Zweig's life as an exiled was a process of mounting losses.

What struck me was what he left in his note, something about how he was despairing over the state of humanity or some such abstraction. Very strange motive for suicide.



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