Showing posts with label thomas mann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thomas mann. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Venetian Blind

My ongoing quest to read books that I should have read before continues to yield mixed results.  Sometimes I come up with something amazing, like Pale Fire; other times it's a dud.  Sadly, "Death in Venice" falls into the latter category.  I don't think it's a bad story, it just doesn't do much for me.


MINI SPOILERS

Thomas Mann wrote this novella, in which a middle-aged writer mopes around and obsesses over a much younger boy.  The language of the book is great - it's hard to tell how much is the translation and how much is Mann, but there are some really beautiful passages.

But - and this is a failing of mine, not a failing of Great Writers - I want more than great language from my books; if I was satisfied with beautiful similes and thoughtful construction, I'd read a heck of a lot more poetry than I do now.  When all that great writing is devoted to the task of illuminating the sad, pathetic, often petty life of a rather pompous man, well, I just don't feel that thrilled.

END SPOILERS

I wasn't enthralled by this story.  I'm sure it didn't help that my copy started with a translation of "Tobias Mindernickel", in which a strange man buys a dog, pampers it, and then stabs it to death.  (Yes, that's an oversimplification, but I don't have a lot of tolerance for that kind of thing.)

I'm definitely not done with Mann - I'll probably pick up The Magic Mountain one of these days, and may also give Doctor Faustus a whirl.  I doubt that I'll return to his short fiction any time soon, though, based on what I read here.